Environmentalists have urged the major parties to keep their green pledges as the parties also faced warnings that the net-zero push may cost them elections.
It comes after London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) expansion was blamed for Labour’s loss in Thursday’s by-election in the Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency.
Conservative MP and GB news broadcaster Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg said the Tory victory showed that the electorates want the government to get rid of “unpopular, expensive green policies.”
Alok Sharma, the former president of the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow, wrote on Twitter that it would be “self-defeating for any political party to seek to break the political consensus on this vital agenda.”
In his victory speech, new Conservative MP Steve Tuckwell said Khan’s “damaging and costly ULEZ policy” cost Labour the election.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told broadcasters on Saturday that he doesn’t think there’s “any doubt” ULEZ was to blame for the defeat.
The policy was born out of Johnson’s Conservative mayorship but was launched by his Labour successor Khan in 2019. The zone, which originally covered the same central London area as the Congestion Charge, now includes all areas between the North and South Circular Roads.
Rees-Mogg: ‘Unpopular, Expensive Green Policies’
Mr. Rees-Mogg told GB News that the Tory victory in the suburban London constituency shows that the Conservatives have a “real chance” in winning the next general election if it was to “get rid of things like ULEZ, which have popped up across the country, and we show we are on the side of the British voter—we stop burdening them with extra charges, extra regulations, extra interference in their lives.”“What works is getting rid of unpopular, expensive green policies, and that is a real opportunity for us.”
Mr. Rees-Mogg’s remarks came as Levelling Up and Housing Secretary Michael Gove warned against “treating the cause of the environment as a religious crusade.”
“My own strong view is that we’re asking too much too quickly,” he said, “but just at this point, when landlords face so much, I think that we should relax the pace,” because the retrofitting would cost a lot.
He also said measures such as low-traffic neighbourhoods are “a crude and sometimes counterproductive tool,” warning political parties, "if people think that you are treating the cause of the environment as a religious crusade, in which you’re dividing the world into goodies and baddies, then you alienate the support that you need for thoughtful environmentalism.”
Baron Goldsmith: Dropping Climate Policies ‘Politically Suicidal’
Senior environmentally-minded Tories have urged both their own party and Labour not to drop green policies in the hope of short-term electoral gains.Baron Goldsmith of Richmond Park, who resigned as an environment minister in the Foreign Office last month with a scathing attack on Mr. Sunak’s “apathy” on the matter, said dropping climate change-tackling policies would be “politically suicidal” given their growing support among voters.
“To use these recent results to advocate abandonment of the UK’s previous environmental leadership is cynical and idiotic,” Lord Goldsmith told The Observer.
Chris Skidmore, the UK government’s net zero tsar, told the PA news agency it would be both “deeply regrettable” and an “abdication of responsible government” if ministers “play politics” with environmental policies.