º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

It's time for me to come out: I'm a Conservative

Being young, gay and a Tory are three combinations you wouldn't expect to put together, but David Kuczora explains why he supports the Conservative party, despite mixed reactions from friends.

David Kuczora admits being a Tory

There's something about me I should tell you. Some, incorrectly, might label it a lifestyle choice. And some of my closest friends showed rather surprising disdain when I admitted it to them.


I don't tend to tell people I meet straight away. Not because I feel embarrassed by it. Far from it. But because I don't think it's polite to ram it down people's throats as soon as you meet them.
 

I'm a Tory. And when you're in your (late) 20s and gay, it's quite a difficult thing to admit. Please - come back! Let's talk about it and I can try to put your mind at rest that I'm not that horrendous.
 

It really is quite unfashionable to be young, gay and Tory. I exaggerate only slightly about the reaction I have received from a couple of my mates. The old adage of, and I paraphrase, "if you're young and conservative then you have no soul" does ring true.
 

It's completely understandable. The Tory party has a lamentable record on gay rights spanning many, many years. And comments like those from Sir Gerald Howarth in the debate on do nothing to help change that perception.

We learn from our elders, and the generations above mine just simply can't forgive the Tories for the litany of times they've stood by and done nothing to support the furthering of gay rights. Or, worse, opposed laws to bolster them. It has become ingrained to despise the Tories.

Ironically, sometimes it's prejudice from the very people demanding less of it in the world.


I say prejudice because most Tories I've met are socially very liberal - and that's the grassroots members of the party as well as politicians.