No, but then when in opposition the new Tory leader (DC having been binned) will be able to do what the Labour Party id doing now - that is castigating the government for having to take harsh measures in order to undo all of the damage done by the previous administration. Meanwhile, of course, the government places the blame on the need for those measures on their predecessors.
Remember the outgoing Chief Secretary to the Treasury's note to his successor, proudly announcing "I'm afraid there's no money left"? (You may also remember the recipient of that note, one David Laws, a man, we were told, the government could barely function without. He was promptly sacked for fiddling after a few weeks and, amazingly, government carried on perfectly well withour him).
It's called politics. It's what politicians make their living at. And it does the country (and more importantly the people in it who pay for all this nonsense to take place) absolutely no good whatsoever.