(Dan Kitwood/Getty)

Through massed ranks of Midlanders, I can see Gregg Wallaceās head bobbing up and down. Heās making couscous and frying some sort of meat, cracking jokes about his MasterChef co-presenterās drinking habit and flexing his biceps for the crowd. Wallace and I are in Worksop, where the North Nottinghamshire Food Festival is kicking off on a blustery Saturday.
Worksop is the largest town in Bassetlaw ā the constituency that saw the greatest Labour-to-Conservative migration at the last general election. Itās the heart of Borisland. And now, exactly one year on from his ignominious resignation, many people here remain steadfastly loyal to their populist tribune. This was where the Boris majority was won: where miners, pensioners, Brexiteers and lifelong Labour voters united to stick it to their old party. Other than the brief blip of Malcolm MacDonald (son of the first Labour PM, Ramsay MacDonald) defecting to National Labour in 1929, Labour had held the town since 1929. Brendan Clarke-Smith is the MP who, in 2019, smashed that red record with a stonking 18.4% swing, the greatest, he later assures me, at any general election since the Second World War. (āI think itās on Wikipedia.ā)
When Johnson took the seat, it heralded a new era of Tory politics. A new coalition, forged from the fires of Brexit, stretched from Hampshire to Hartlepool. Like Columbus, he seemed to have landed upon virgin territory ripe for the taking. Labour ā cosmopolitan, effete and out of touch ā looked sunk. But four years on, the shaggy conqueror is gone, and a string of by-elections threatens to chip away at his majority he built. In Selby, Uxbridge, Mid Bedfordshire, Somerton and now Chris Pincherās seat of Tamworth, the prognosis is gloomy. So far, the bookies believe every single one will be lost. And Bassetlaw itself, the clearest expression of that much-heralded post-Brexit realignment, is now a harbinger of doom. In March, one poll suggested it, and all the other 44 Red Wall seats won from Labour, will be lost at next yearās general election. What went wrong?
āHeās still hugely popular,ā Clarke-Smith tells me. āA lot of people voted for Boris. It wasnāt the only thing ā it had been trending our way anyway ā but those Brexit Party voters and so on came across, and he was a big part of that.ā The big man, he says, has an āauraā about him that helped draw in converts. āYou still get voters saying: āOh, I voted for Borisā¦’ā
When I meet the MP, he is wearing a checked suit and has a small ketchup stain at the corner of his mouth. A self-described ālibertarian Thatcheriteā, he was raised on a Nottingham council estate, trained as a teacher, and worked at a school in Romania before entering politics. He is also, on the day I visit, on the cover of the Worksop Guardian, delivering a sly grin alongside the headline: āMP slammed for āvileā Twitter attack.ā It is the outcome of Clarke-Smithās engagement in the culture wars ā he is at the fore of a group of working-class Tories keen to give as good as they get online. A member of the New Conservatives, a collective currently lobbying for tougher action on immigration, he is also part of the Common Sense Group, which has attacked āthe woke agendaā.
He says this posture is what the Red Wall wants. āApart from the obvious stuff about the economy and NHS, what would you guess the main issue is here?ā he asks me. āThe number one thing I get emailed about, more than Dominic Cummings, more than anything, is small boats. There is very little immigration here ā but itās the number one issue because they linked it to taking back control.ā
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