The Conservative Pa...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

The Conservative Party leadership vote…

452 Posts
99 Users
1120 Reactions
2,541 Views
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

They’ll dangle some irresistable temptations in front of Farage and Tice and they won’t be able to resist.

The only thing that'll tempt Farage is leadership, and the Tories aren't going to offer him that.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 11:38 am
crazyjenkins01, swanny853, swanny853 and 1 people reacted
Posts: 7433
Free Member
 

The remaining Tory “moderates” are all spineless pieces of shit that will bend over backwards to accommodate any and all leaders regardless of how extreme they are.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 12:26 pm
supernova, dissonance, binners and 3 people reacted
Posts: 2459
Free Member
 

Appologies to the Lib Dems as well, I forgot about them. Perhaps because they are the box that people tick when they'd rather draw a cock and balls on the ballot paper. (I should know, I've voted for them twice in the past).

The Lib Dem vote is more an expression of how the electorate view the failings of their preferred party rather than enthusiasm for any particular values or policy expressed by the Lib Dems..


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 12:30 pm
 MSP
Posts: 15473
Free Member
 

The Lib Dem vote is more an expression of how the electorate view the failings of their preferred party rather than enthusiasm for any particular values or policy expressed by the Lib Dems..

To be fair, that's how labour just won.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 12:38 pm
dissonance, mrlebowski, dissonance and 1 people reacted
Posts: 1001
Free Member
 

One of the issues the Tories have had over recent years is the amount of influence the right of the party has had, so that more centrist/electable leaders have ended up compromised after having to pander to the right. Now that they’re going to be electing someone from the right of the party, will we see the centre of the party being able to have as much influence

No. Because there isn't going to be a Brexit referendum with Remain winning between now and then.

The Tory tack to the populist right was a direct reaction to what the referendum showed them - a large proportion of the electorate harbour unspoken prejudices and are willing to be lied to in order not to have examine their own issues.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 1:25 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

The Lib Dem vote is more an expression of how the electorate view the failings of their preferred party rather than enthusiasm for any particular values or policy expressed by the Lib Dems

Don’t underestimate the amount of people who when asked ‘what do you want to see in a political leader?’ answer ‘a paunchy, middle-aged bloke in a wetsuit on a big water slide’


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 1:28 pm
hatter and hatter reacted
Posts: 2459
Free Member
 

"To be fair, that’s how labour just won."

Exactly, and in large part owing to disaffected Conservative voters ticking the Lib Dem box rather than drawing a cock and balls on the ballot paper!

"Don’t underestimate the amount of people who when asked ‘what do you want to see in a political leader?’ answer ‘a paunchy, middle-aged bloke in a wetsuit on a big water slide’"

That's good.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 1:57 pm
Posts: 2344
Free Member
 

Saw pundit on twitter post hat if 25 moderate Tory MP defect to LibDems and then Ed Davy would be leader of opposition, snag is finding 25 moderate Tory mps


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 2:28 pm
Posts: 41642
Free Member
 

I’m not sure there are many moderates left in the tory party after Johnson’s purges. The assumption that centrists will leave the party split and marginalised is probably overegged.

That sort of depends what sort of candidates they find at the next election.  The exodus and collapse last time round means that in 5 years time there going to be a lot of new Tory MP's. Unless the right wing can survive at the top of the party until 2029 and be organized enough to control MP selection, there may well be enough moderate MP's with their no confidence letters for the day after the election to install someone more palatable to the center.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 3:40 pm
Posts: 1001
Free Member
 

“Don’t underestimate the amount of people who when asked ‘what do you want to see in a political leader?’ answer ‘a paunchy, middle-aged bloke in a wetsuit on a big water slide’”

That’s good.

It isn't. It reflects just how many folk don't feel they have a political home as the declining UK thrashes around looking for snake oil cures or someone else to blame.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 3:57 pm
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

The remaining Tory “moderates” are all spineless pieces of shit that will bend over backwards to accommodate any and all leaders regardless of how extreme they are.

Well the One Nation Group have just announced that they have in fact located their spine and are refusing to back either of the candidates, Their press release says:

"The Tory Reform Group (TRG) will not be endorsing a candidate in this year’s Conservative leadership contest.

As the home of One Nation Conservatism since 1975, the TRG is committed to being radically moderate, values-driven, and focused on the future. Throughout the contest, we have sought to engage extensively with all the leadership campaigns in order to understand the views and approaches of the candidates. Unfortunately, we have been consistently disappointed by the lack of engagement from the two candidates chosen by MPs.

TRG members were consulted throughout the process, and the results clearly show that neither candidate has secured widespread support from the majority of our membership. Both have used rhetoric and focused on issues which are far and away from the party at its best, let alone the One Nation values we cherish and uphold. Therefore, the board of the TRG has unanimously concluded that we are unable to endorse either candidate."


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 4:54 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 28475
Free Member
 

All these 'moderates' all happily voted for the Rwanda scheme and various other hardline policies. All of this is as much on them as it is on the kemis and Jenricks. Let them go down with the ship rather than drift into the LibDems and spread their poison over there


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 9:19 pm
supernova, Poopscoop, MoreCashThanDash and 5 people reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

The TRG sound like a political force to be reckoned with. I wonder who he is?


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 10:31 pm
supernova, oldnpastit, mrlebowski and 3 people reacted
Posts: 16216
Full Member
 

binners
Full Member
The TRG sound like a political force to be reckoned with. I wonder who he is?

Got me thinking, what happened to the Five Families? I'm guessing that after the cull they can now all fit in a Bond Bug.


 
Posted : 10/10/2024 10:52 pm
Posts: 2808
Full Member
 

I liked it when he fell off the paddleboard.


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 1:20 am
Poopscoop, binners, binners and 1 people reacted
Posts: 1001
Free Member
 

I've just read something fantastic that I didn't already know...

Apparently the tactical mastermind behind Jimmy Dimly's leadership campaign was none other than well-known tactical genius Grant Shapps.

That's utterly hilarious. How long before Shapps has it on his CV as an example of his political experience and nous?

Meanwhile I am amused by the thought of Dimly raging through the corridors asking a sequence of people where that damned Shapps idiot is. The line in return is suspiciously uniform, but Dimly can't quite put his finger on it.

"You, Green isn't it? Where the hell is Shapps?"

"No idea, sir".

"You, Fox isn't it? Where the hell is Shapps?"

"No idea, sir".

"You, Stockheath isn't it......"

What a wunch of bankers.


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 8:42 am
Posts: 5727
Full Member
 

Newsagents podcast has been amusing the past 2 days.  Their sources seem to show it was a massive screwup with individual mp's thinking they were being clever


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 8:44 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

We’ve elected Robert Jenrick by mistake!

A00267AC-89CC-41C3-8287-CD798CDC2AD0


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 9:45 am
Posts: 1001
Free Member
 

From the Newsagents Podcast - quoting a former Tory grandee on Cleverly:

"I know James is as thick as shit, but I think he'd make a good leader of the Conservative Party".

Sums it up pretty well perfectly for me.


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 9:56 am
Posts: 8306
Free Member
 

It appears the "TRG" has 7 MP's.


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 10:03 am
binners, kelvin, binners and 1 people reacted
Posts: 4027
Free Member
 

"The TRG sound like a political force to be reckoned with. I wonder who he is?"


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 10:19 am
binners, kelvin, kelvin and 1 people reacted
 kilo
Posts: 6666
Full Member
 

The TRG are very much an old school tory thang,  and used to be quite large, no doubt they’ve withered as the conservatives lurched towards a brexit / gammony/ racist fan base  - there’s no place for “moderates” now.


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 10:23 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

Which is why all the moderate voters all headed off to swoon over Ed in his wetsuit.

Can you see Robert Jenrick or Kemi Badanoch doing a bungee jump? No, me neither. But unless they’re prepared to jump off a big crane in a supermarket car park in Sussex with a big elastic band on their ankles, that vote has gone for ever

B361E92E-EE1D-454F-A21B-BC0DA0A59418


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 10:40 am
Posts: 20169
Full Member
 

Latest news item on the subject.  😉


 
Posted : 11/10/2024 12:35 pm
diggerythedog, Bazz, MoreCashThanDash and 3 people reacted
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

Just reading Badenoch's wiki page (as I don't really know much about her) and In the section marked "Early career" It says that she started out as a software engineer in 2003 and by 2006 was an Associate Director of Wealth Management at Coutts bank. That's quite some career path...What's the going rate for a software engineer £35-40K? I can't imagine that the role at Coutts was anything less than 6 figures.

I guess being a Tory candidate opens up some doors, huh?


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 11:45 am
anono and anono reacted
 MSP
Posts: 15473
Free Member
 

The remaining Tory “moderates” are all spineless pieces of shit that will bend over backwards to accommodate any and all leaders regardless of how extreme they are.

isn't it the ones who ran away instead of at least trying to put the brakes on extremism the real cowards?


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 12:06 pm
Posts: 4381
Full Member
 

isn’t it the ones who ran away instead of at least trying to put the brakes on extremism the real cowards?

TBF I think they less 'ran away' than were quite ruthlessly and deliberately purged from the party by B0-Jo and Cummings in 2019.

The Tory moderates with spines, the Soubrys, Grieves and Gaukes of this world were largely absent by 2020.

Which is why all the moderate voters all headed off to swoon over Ed in his wetsuit.

Whilst it's an easy pisstake, the Lib Dem approach was to combine Ed's mildy daft adventures with a fairly steady of Drumbeat of policy announcements, interviews and panels, much of this lead by deputy leader Daisy Cooper, who was a constant presence in the media rounds during the campaign.

It worked.


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 12:29 pm
fruitbat, Del, fruitbat and 1 people reacted
Posts: 8306
Free Member
 

They are all completely mad.

https://twitter.com/RobertJenrick/status/1845457822873464862


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 1:01 pm
Posts: 6874
Full Member
 

JRM will restore respect. Full Victorian school master stylee.


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 1:06 pm
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

They missed off the "or else" from the bottom of that jenrick ad

They wanted baked bean guy but he was busy


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 1:08 pm
 nerd
Posts: 433
Free Member
 

What’s the going rate for a software engineer £35-40K?

Double that!

I work as a software engineer in the public sector and even I get paid more than that!


 
Posted : 14/10/2024 1:21 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

Obviously neither Badanoch nor Honest Bob are exactly averse to stoking up culture war nonsense, in fact at times it’s difficult to see if they do anything but, but she’s now taking it to the next level.

As anyone familiar with SEND provision in this country will tell you, this latest tirade shows either utter detachment from reality or an unbelievable level of cynicism to attempt to weaponise the subject for her own ends in her endless culture war

Either way - and it’s actually probably both, isn’t it? - she should be absolutely nowhere near the leadership of a political party. She’s a genuinely nasty piece of work

What kind of person would drag autistic children into the culture wars? The Kemi Badenoch kind


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 7:46 am
winston, MoreCashThanDash, winston and 1 people reacted
Posts: 6575
Full Member
 

There really is only one word for her and it begins with c.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 10:09 am
somafunk and somafunk reacted
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

There really is only one word for her and it begins with c.

Small c conservative?


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 10:43 am
binners and binners reacted
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

I knew that the candidates were taking donations, but I hadn't realised they needed to pony up £50k's worth just to be a candidate.

And,

In 2022 Liz Truss was given more than £500,000 for her leadership campaign, with about half coming from donors linked to hedge fund bosses and other City financiers...

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/26/conservative-leadership-race-spending-cap-raised-to-400000


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 11:46 am
Posts: 8306
Free Member
 

hedge fund bosses and other City financiers…

Aren't they woke and lefty?


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 11:55 am
Posts: 9180
Full Member
 

JRM will restore respect. Full Victorian school master stylee.

I deeply hope that is an ironic post.

His pronouncements on abortion and “failing to see the moral argument” for paid annual leave - means that on his demise, I will celebrate.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 11:56 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

I don’t think the anyone in the present Tory party understands the concept of irony


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 12:02 pm
Posts: 32265
Full Member
 

His pronouncements on abortion and “failing to see the moral argument” for paid annual leave – means that on his demise, I will celebrate.

Given that his dad wrote "The Sovereign Individual" that has helped fuel all kinds of right wing bellendery, it's no surprise.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 12:03 pm
jamj1974 and jamj1974 reacted
Posts: 7321
Free Member
 

His pronouncements on abortion and “failing to see the moral argument” for paid annual leave – means that on his demise, I will celebrate.

I will join you.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 12:22 pm
jamj1974 and jamj1974 reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

You’d like to hope that in raising subjects like abortion or the spoilt snowflakiness of people with autism that they’re just appealing to their present electorate - the foaming-at-the-mouth far right headbangers of the Tory membership? That once they get past them they’ll tack back towards something resembling normality? Fat chance!

In the case of these two and the mood of the loons left as Tory MPs I think that’s just not going to happen. This is the real deal. They’re all madder than a bucket of ferrets

I remember when Truss was elected on her totally mental economic agenda, people saying “yeah, but she’s just appealing to the membership, but she won’t actually do anything that unhinged once she’s in power”

That went well. This’ll go the same way. When whichever of these whoppers gets elected, expect constant calls to withdraw from the ECHR, bringing back hanging, feeding immigrants into wood chipping machines and other associated far right lunacy


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 12:22 pm
tewit and tewit reacted
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

Let us not forget that mogg was defeated in a democratic election by a man wearing a baked bean balaclava.

The man is political toast


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 1:03 pm
tewit, jamj1974, tewit and 1 people reacted
Posts: 146
Full Member
 

I wonder what it says about British society that a couple of weapons-grade @rseholes like these two feel that their best chance of achieving power is to appeal to the nastiest elements of the electorate who think that people who are disabled have an unfair advantage.

Was Thatcher this bad?


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 1:38 pm
fruitbat and fruitbat reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

Was Thatcher this bad?

The real irony of this is that although they all claim to idolise her royal handbagness, I don’t doubt for a minute that if she was still around she would absolutely despise them all and be utterly appalled at what the Tory party has become since Brexit

The very idea of leaving the Single Market would have given her a seizure


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 1:45 pm
dudeofdoom, stumpyjon, MoreCashThanDash and 9 people reacted
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

I wonder what it says about British society that a couple of weapons-grade @rseholes like these two feel that their best chance of achieving power is to appeal to the nastiest elements of the electorate who think that people who are disabled have an unfair advantage.

Ask some of your neighbours, I bet you'll find more than one who reckon the *disabled have it cushy etc.

* - insert any group here


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 1:54 pm
fruitbat and fruitbat reacted
 IHN
Posts: 19694
Full Member
 

The real irony of this is that although they all claim to idolise her royal handbagness, I don’t doubt for a minute that if she was still around she would absolutely despise them all and be utterly appalled at what the Tory party has become since Brexit

The very idea of leaving the Single Market would have given her a seizure

..and she had a fierce intellect, and whether you agreed with her or not, she had a cohesive economic strategy and a clear vision of what she wanted to achieve* The current lot have absolutely none of the above, they are chancers saying anything they think might be popular, sixth-form Tories in the same way the Corbyn was a sixth-form socialist.

*I've said it before on here, but I was once at an event with Tony Benn and he was asked which modern politician he most admired, and he said Thatcher for basically these reasons


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 2:02 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

@IHN - I absolutely hated Fatcha with every fibre of my being for what she so unvaryingly did to the part of the country I grew up in. It may have been ‘a price worth paying’ for her, but she wasn’t the one on the pointy end of that particular deal.

I hated her but also a certain respect for her, for the reasons you stated. She said what she was going to do and she did it. 

But this lot? I feel nothing but complete and utter contempt for every last one of them. I’m certain she would have done too. Opportunistic, morally-bankrupt, posturing charlatans and greedy third-rate grifters


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 2:34 pm
v8ninety, MoreCashThanDash, Del and 5 people reacted
Posts: 1794
Free Member
 

Thatcher.... well if you lived in middle England it was fine, however for the North East mining, steel and shipbuilding communities it was very different. There was no redemption nothing to support those communities.

Those communities paid the price for Thatcherism and continue to pay.

The only person that I was ever happy to see dead. One day there will be an inquiry into the Miners strike and it will be another Hillsborough.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 4:25 pm
dissonance, binners, dissonance and 1 people reacted
Posts: 6762
Full Member
 

however for the North East mining, steel and shipbuilding

The end was nigh anyway, she just accelerated it and became the lighting rod for the people who couldn't cope with reality. It absolutely could have been managed a lot better but without massive government subsidies which the EU wouldn't have allowed and don't work long term the outcome would have been the same.

The simple truth is the UK is not competitive in those industries, partly due to workforce but a lot to do with Geography and our desire for some basic employment rights.

Best thing we could do is be part of a bigger block of similar countries so we can enforce our trade and employment standards on imports. But the very people most likely to benefit from that arrangement threw it away on the back of simplistic, unrealistic solutions and down right lies that played to their insular and parochial outlook.

These turkeys continue to vote for Chirstmas now backing Reform as much as Tory loons.

In the meantime Starmer is lambasted from the left and right for not just making it all better, whatever better looks like it is some time off due to the populist crap we've endured for the last decade.


 
Posted : 15/10/2024 6:32 pm
mattyfez, MoreCashThanDash, kelvin and 3 people reacted
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

The end was nigh anyway, she just accelerated it and became the lighting rod for the people who couldn’t cope with reality. It absolutely could have been managed a lot better but without massive government subsidies which the EU wouldn’t have allowed and don’t work long term the outcome would have been the same.

And the other EU countries faced with the same issues also adopted 'Thatcherism'?

Hint, no they didn't...


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 8:41 am
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

The current lot have absolutely none of the above, they are chancers saying anything they think might be popular, sixth-form Tories in the same way

As fun as it is to sneer away it isnt supported by the facts. The majority of them clearly have a primary ideology which they were then happy (since the continuation of thatcherism works great until you run out of assets to sell cheap and the rental bills come due) to pad out with some popularism in order to try and get power.

Its utterly baffling seeing people try and claim that Truss for example doesnt have a strategy and economic vision. I mean she is still arguing for it even now.

Johnson is the obvious exception whose only ideology is himself.

Jenrick is unclear currently. He may either be throwing away his personal beliefs for power or he may be copying Starmer in lying about doing so in order to get power.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 9:45 am
keithb and keithb reacted
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

He may either be throwing away his personal beliefs for power or he may be copying Starmer in lying about doing so in order to get power.

What did Starmer lie about?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 10:29 am
Posts: 12482
Free Member
 

What did Starmer lie about?

A few years ago he appeared to be a lot more left wing than he now is so he was either lying then and it now being honest or he was honest then and now dropped all that for a chance to be the moderate tory leader. I would go with the latter.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 10:36 am
ernielynch, supernova, MSP and 7 people reacted
Posts: 8306
Free Member
 

The end was nigh anyway, she just accelerated it and became the lighting rod for the people who couldn’t cope with reality. It absolutely could have been managed a lot better but without massive government subsidies which the EU wouldn’t have allowed and don’t work long term the outcome would have been the same.

So how do Italy, Germany and France continue to build a lot of high tech cruise ships?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 10:45 am
supernova and supernova reacted
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

On the News Agents podcast this week, they interviewed Graham Brady - he's got a book out,  whom I've always though seemed like he came from the [more] sensible wing of the Party. When asked who he was backing for leadership he said,without hesitating Badenoch and called her "genuine".

Two things. Thing One, if Brady is voting for her, then I've clearly misread his politics all this time, and he's actually bonkers, and Thing Two. Of all the words you could use to describe Badenoch; 'Genuine' is an interesting choice, that is to say; her views clearly aren't just a pitch at leadership based on echoing the worst of the party membership's inner dialogue, they're actually the things she believes..?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 10:49 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

Oh Christ, let’s not have this thread end up with the usual suspects just banging on and on about Starmer

Back on topic: I don’t believe that Honest Bob, like Johnson before him, has a single ideal or belief. He’s all about his own personal advancement and will say anything to any given audience to progress that the furthest.

The Tory membership and the remaining Tory MPs are predominantly right wing nutjobs so that’s where he’s pitching himself. However, if people think he’ll ‘do a Starmer’ to pacify the nutters, then re-engage with the real world when he’s got the job, then they’re delusional. He won’t be allowed to. It’s Cruella who pulls his strings and he knows it. He’s just a right wing sock puppet.

Badanoch is the real deal. A true far right headbanger which is why the membership all love her.

They must be really conflicted at the moment. A true believer who’s the wrong sex and wrong colour or a recent convert who fits their ideal criteria (pale, male and stale)


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 10:57 am
mattyfez, kelvin, mattyfez and 1 people reacted
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

The Tory membership and the remaining Tory MPs are predominantly right wing nutjobs so that’s where he’s pitching himself.

Membership yes but the tory MPs no.  A lot of the true nutters went in the election. Hence why the centrists did well up until getting carried away with tactical voting. As fun as it is to bang on in the normal hyperbolic way it does work better if you look at what the mps are actually doing. I would note your ranting about puppet masters and so forth is basically word for word what is being sprouted on some right wing leading forums about Rayner and the unions having Starmer dancing to their every command.

Badanoch is the real deal.

So not a opportunistic charlatan then?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 11:40 am
 IHN
Posts: 19694
Full Member
 

Its utterly baffling seeing people try and claim that Truss for example doesnt have a strategy and economic vision. I mean she is still arguing for it even now

I said cohesive economic strategy. She does not have one of those. Thatcher did; many people didn't agree with it or like it, but she had one and it did what she intended it to do.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 11:53 am
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

So not a opportunistic charlatan then?

She may well be, but she’s a consistent one. She’s always been barking mad and isn’t advocating anything now that she hasn’t been doing for years. Maybe getting a bit more extreme but she’s always been ‘of the right’

Honest Bob on the other hand was a Cameron remainer, right up until the point where he wasn’t, and has now travelled the full distance to just repeat word-for-word whatever Suella tells him

Membership yes but the tory MPs no.  A lot of the true nutters went in the election

I don’t know where you get that idea from. The few sane MP’s who hadn’t been purged already by Johnson all stood down and didn’t seek re-election. The rump of Tory MPs are now right wing headbangers, by any metric, hence them selecting Jenrick or Badanoch as their new messiah as they go chasing off to the right after Farage.

To be fair, I wouldn’t have a clue what a Tory MP like Helen Whately thought about it all as she’s barely sentient. There’s quite a few fall into that category

I would note your ranting about puppet masters and so forth is basically word for word what is being sprouted on some right wing leading forums about Rayner and the unions having Starmer dancing to their every command

Again… consistency. They’ve always said that and will always continue to say that, so no surprises there then


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 11:53 am
Posts: 30093
Full Member
 

Membership yes but the tory MPs no.

A very interesting reading of who is parliament now. I'd argue wide of the mark. The Conservative parliamentary party is lost. Just because a few loud Northern MPs have gone, doesn't mark a shift towards anything sane among the remaining, perhaps quieter, members. Repairing from the Johnson days is going to be hard, because having moved closer to the membership (a membership swelled by exUKIP entrants), the parliamentary party is not going to be able to move away from them any time soon... because (normally) they have a say in who is selected to stand in seats, and... who leads the party.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 12:05 pm
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

There's an argument to be made that the succession of unsuitable leaders that both parties have recently endured put in place by the votes of it's membership, rather than being selected solely by their fellow MPs is probably an idea that's past its time. I wonder which party will junk those rules first?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 12:22 pm
Del and Del reacted
Posts: 41642
Free Member
 

Two things. Thing One, if Brady is voting for her, then I’ve clearly misread his politics all this time, and he’s actually bonkers, and Thing Two. Of all the words you could use to describe Badenoch; ‘Genuine’ is an interesting choice, that is to say; her views clearly aren’t just a pitch at leadership based on echoing the worst of the party membership’s inner dialogue, they’re actually the things she believes..?

No, I think he's always been very conservative.  Being chair of the 1922 committee I think gave him an air of superiority and impartiality because he didn't have to publicly take sides in any contest.  And being the author of "the Brady amendment" which was supposed to be the compromise on Brexit and NI made him seem like the sensible one against May.  Whenever he's been interviewed though he's somewhat on the right of the party.

And example of "keeping your mouth shut and just appearing conservative, rather than open it and remove all doubt".


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 12:28 pm
nickc and nickc reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

There’s an argument to be made that the succession of unsuitable leaders that both parties have recently endured put in place by the votes of it’s membership, rather than being selected solely by their fellow MPs is probably an idea that’s past its time. I wonder which party will junk those rules first?

The few remaining sane Tory MPs left (everything’s relative) were very keen to change the rules before this leadership election.

They're not all daft. Or at least they’re possessed by a sense of self-preservation. They know full well that their party is presently at the mercy of their insurgent Faragist ‘membership’ in the same way as the Momentum tail was for two elections wagging the Labour dog, thus rendering it repellent to the wider electorate


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 12:30 pm
julians, nickc, nickc and 1 people reacted
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

No, I think he’s always been very conservative

Yes, his voting record certainly agrees with your assessment, not mine. I think you're right though, he's been able to remain aloof of much of the party politicking and only really gets press when he's giving failed PMs their marching orders.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 12:46 pm
julians and julians reacted
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

I said cohesive economic strategy. She does not have one of those

She did. It was badly flawed but it was there. Whilst there has been massive historical revisionism its best not to forget Truss had a lot of support initially for the budget because it was Thatcherism 101.

The problem being Thatcher and her successors had already had a fire sale of all the state assets in order to prop things up and hence nothing was left for Truss.

That plus the pension funds were taking large risks. Whilst she did provide the spark they were waiting to explode anyway and probably would have done so this year anyway.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 1:01 pm
Posts: 30093
Full Member
 

a lot of support initially for the budget

Ignore anyone that did. Saves a lot of nonsense.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 1:06 pm
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

A few years ago he appeared to be a lot more left wing than he now is so he was either lying then and it now being honest or he was honest then and now dropped all that for a chance to be the moderate tory leader. I would go with the latter.

Hmm, so zero evidence whatsoever and not even a reply from dissonance, even though he's continued in the 'conversation' - I take it that's because they too can't back up their libellous comments?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 2:46 pm
Posts: 32265
Full Member
 

Please, this is not the Starmer thread


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:24 pm
binners, kelvin, binners and 1 people reacted
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

Hmm, so zero evidence whatsoever and not even a reply from dissonance,

Because it was answered plus Binners was throwing his normal thread police bollox, although I do tend, considering his team prior to the leadership contest, to think Starmer did lie in the leadership contest about his intentions.  Can I prove it, nope but then I doubt he would fancy his chances in a libel court.

I am rather amazed you havent come across this before especially with reference to Jenrick. You do know Starmers original manifesto right?

I also wasnt aware that I am required to personally respond to you and given the entitlement I doubt I will in future.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:25 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

*sigh*

7AEF8C32-D987-42E2-99A8-6AFFAA3DF7C7


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:28 pm
Posts: 12482
Free Member
 

sigh indeed - do you not bore yourself with what must be the 100th time you have posted that sign.  I get it, you don't want your great leader to be criticised but you are in the minority as most people think he is shit so you may as well get used to it.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:31 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

You’ve got 2 threads going where the same handful of you shout at each other, in furious agreement, with the same endlessly repetitive posts, while everyone else just leaves you to it.

Why don’t you bore off back to one of those instead of ruining every other thread with stuff about Starmer, who you’re clearly obsessed with, that has no relevance to the actual subject being discussed

This is about the Tory leadership election. I know you think he’s a Tory, as you never tire of telling us, but last time I looked Starmer wasn’t in the running


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:40 pm
mattyfez, AD, johnny and 7 people reacted
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

Can I prove it, nope but then I doubt he would fancy his chances in a libel court.

Always good to see folk when called out for posting bollox, eventually agree that they were talking bollox.

Now let's get back to the two folk who've had backers/donors spending hundreds of thousands to get them a non-job for the next 4-5 years - why is that?


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 3:49 pm
Posts: 7656
Full Member
 

Always good to see folk when called out for posting bollox, eventually agree that they were talking bollox.

Ermm no I didnt say that.

Kind of proves how pointless it was responding to you when a)you are incapable of reading b) entitled as **** and c)Binners loses his mind at the obvious comparison between Jenrick and Starmer and whether their leadership contest positions are anything other than a temporary one.  My position is for Starmer that even the barest glance through the reflections of his team on the last few years is you would be gullible to think that.

For Jenrick its difficult to tell. Its certainly more complex than inane comments about him being a puppet of others. Aside from anything else you only need to look at Sunak or Cummings, from the other side, to see how well puppet masters often work out.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 4:33 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

For Jenrick its difficult to tell.

It really isn't. Its not about 'puppet masters', its about parliamentary maths

He's already been very publicly put 'on warning' by Suella and the headbangers that if he tries to renage on the hardline right wing noises he's been making, they'll put the letters in and they'll be having another leadership election to replace him. It'll only take 19 of them to do that and he's gone.

Thats why he's bending over backwards to repeatedly assure them that he really is the horrible bastard they clearly now demand as leader. But as we all know the Tory right can never ever be placated and no matter what he does, they'll think he's a pinko liberal communist anyway

‘They have him by the balls’: senior Tories warn Robert Jenrick will be at mercy of ‘Braverman right’ as leader


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 5:16 pm
Posts: 5688
Free Member
 

It’ll only take 19 of them to do that and he’s gone.

No it won't. They changed the rules last week. Good to see the same old arguements and you as the self appointed forum police still going strong. First time in months that I've even looked at a politics thread.....off I'll pop again!


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 6:02 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

No it won’t. They changed the rules last week.

They changed the rules a while back to say that they’re ‘safe’ for a year before they face another leadership election, but what’s changed since then? I can’t find any reference to anything.

Jenrick is already being openly threatened by the feral, backbench right wing looms before he’s even been elected that he’s ‘on notice’. The reality is that the Tory party is completely ungovernable and the last 10 years have had the right wing tail wagging the dog. It was that that delivered us Brexit, Johnson, Truss amongst other joys

Whoever wins the poisoned chalice in a couple of weeks, I wouldn’t risk a penny of my money on betting they’d still be in place at the next general election. By Tory standards they’d be in for some sort of long service award if they were. No chance. Gone 12 months and 1 day after being elected to be immediately replaced by the next sock puppet


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 6:17 pm
mattyfez, IHN, IHN and 1 people reacted
Posts: 30093
Full Member
 

1922 members have been briefing the likes of GBN that’ll they change it to 36. Making themselves feel relevant I suppose. There probably will be change with such a small number of MPs. But look at the votes for Badenoch… whatever the threshold set is… and they have a year to decide and implement one… there will be more MPs than that ready to resist any move towards normal.


 
Posted : 16/10/2024 6:23 pm
Poopscoop and Poopscoop reacted
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

The coverage of the leadership election as brought to you from the 1950’s

https://Twitter.com/marinapurkiss/status/1846921079253590131?s=46&t=1lK7Dw1b6RqGJyvufO-trQ


 
Posted : 18/10/2024 10:28 am
IHN and IHN reacted
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

Well the big day has arrived at last!

Anybody know what time it'll be announced?


 
Posted : 02/11/2024 8:14 am
Page 4 / 6

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!