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A Tory coronation? – politicalbetting.com

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  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    MrEd said:

    kinabalu said:

    MrEd said:

    kle4 said:

    MrEd said:

    kle4 said:

    In order of debate performance

    Sunak - mostly because he spoke the most and had to counter questions and attacks more, and largely did so well
    Truss - Confident, direct, painted it as her vs Rishi
    Kemi - Quieter, but when speaking mostly did well
    Tugendhat - had some moments, but largely irrelevant
    Mordaunt - Made no real impact

    In order of debate winners

    Truss - more substantial a figure than Mordaunt, and though she had some bad answers from my POV, nothing to sink her. From this I'd think she can overtake Mordaunt.
    Sunak - Still comes across well, and dealt with attacks mostly ok. Solidified his position with MPs I think.
    Tugendhat - was going nowhere and still is, so no change.
    Kemi - did not grab attention, felt like a bystander
    Mordaunt - eclipsed massively by Truss, had no standout moments.

    Sunak's problem is not that he doesn't come across well, it is that he is too slick and won't understand people's concerns. What in tonight's debate provided evidence that addressed this?
    I've never bought into the idea that slick presentation means you cannot understand peoples' concerns. I don't think politicians who imply such things believe it either, since they don't claim it if they/their leader presents well. It is just something they claim if they know they are not as good at presenting as their opponent, so it is fundamentally a dishonest attack when Rishi's counterparts imply it.

    However, I agree that many do think that of Rishi (though I disagree it is because of his slickness), and agree he hasn't addressed that. How can he? If he says he understands people don't believe him.
    It may not be fair but that is life. Sunak's problem is that he was in charge of the Treasury. So when you are making decisions that impact people's income, such as putting up NI, your personal circumstances are going to be even more in the spotlight if you are a very rich individual with a wife that has / had non-Dom status etc.

    Sunak is the candidate Labour would love to face because any decision that has an impact on people's finances - as almost all will - will be contrasted with his wealth and status. It will be a 24 hour shitfest about Rich-y Rishi. And there are plenty of people out there with whom that message will resonate.
    I am Labour and I can assure you this is not right. The one we want is Truss.
    MrEd loves to pretend he knows about Labour politics but has been shown to be a nonsense speaker before. I don’t think he’s ever met a Labour member.
    Horse loves to pretend he knows about me. I was a Labour member during the early Cameron years and met many. I have actually more friends and acquaintances who are left-leaning than right.

    I do like you Horse but you do talk some Horse Shit sometimes.
    I am confused. I thought, MrEd, that you were a horse, named after https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mister_Ed

    Whereas CHB is clearly a *battery*, not a horse.
    Mister Ed theme song
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GAbc5uQXJo
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,552

    kinabalu said:

    nico679 said:

    Penny doesn’t really stand for much but she looks good and has a calm manner which is quite comforting . I like her voice and I think world leaders would be somewhat star struck when they meet her .

    Not sure what the big deal is on a lack of detail , get a good team and job done .

    Perhaps her Bondish Money Penny styling is clouding my judgement !

    I like her too - but she's not bright or focused enough to be a good PM imo.
    If "Jen" in "The IT Crowd" could be head of the IT Dept without knowing squat about computers, then surely "Penny" of "The BJ Crowd" can be head of the Con Govt.
    Yes, but Jen was pretty good in that job. She kept the lads on side and impressed management. At least until she dropped the internet.

    https://youtu.be/Vywf48Dhyns
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,737
    Meanwhile Rishi keeps wheeling out the “nation’s credit card” bollox. I’m concerned he actually believes this and plans to run a balanced budget during what might be a fierce economic contraction.

    Mordaunt is bland. No idea what she stands for still. Kemi is there to raise her profile so Rishi can appoint her Chancellor I suspect.

    TT by a mile the best candidate.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    IshmaelZ said:

    Orka said:

    29C at 8pm, central London

    Tomorrow is going to be fearsome

    42s and 43s still showing up in some models

    https://community.netweather.tv/topic/97297-model-output-discussion-record-heat-arriving/page/192/#comments
    Netweather. Fiction.
    That's a link to the discussion forum. I hope you are not suggesting that there is a danger that contributors to specialised internet discussion boards have a deficient understanding of their subject?

    Really just posting for the links in that link to recent models.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,437
    kle4 said:

    biggles said:

    kle4 said:

    I really do worry about a Sunak vs Truss contest.

    Not because I think he is the bee's knees or anything, but because Truss knows she is not as good at answering things and presenting herself, so she will just go hard on how she is the true Brexiter and belittle any attempt to discuss detail, as he will probably out debate her on such matters.

    If that’s the final two, I think it’s 50/50 Truss will drop a clanger and drop out.
    Apparently they may have had to sign something promising they won't do that if they get to the final two.

    I'm just not sure she can drop any clanger big enough to ruin her chances against Sunak - she is the hard Brexiter's choice, many members don't like Rishi, and she is right she is an experienced minister, unlikely to make a devastating cock up.
    Oo they had to sign something, spooky
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    MrEd said:

    kinabalu said:

    MrEd said:

    kle4 said:

    MrEd said:

    kle4 said:

    In order of debate performance

    Sunak - mostly because he spoke the most and had to counter questions and attacks more, and largely did so well
    Truss - Confident, direct, painted it as her vs Rishi
    Kemi - Quieter, but when speaking mostly did well
    Tugendhat - had some moments, but largely irrelevant
    Mordaunt - Made no real impact

    In order of debate winners

    Truss - more substantial a figure than Mordaunt, and though she had some bad answers from my POV, nothing to sink her. From this I'd think she can overtake Mordaunt.
    Sunak - Still comes across well, and dealt with attacks mostly ok. Solidified his position with MPs I think.
    Tugendhat - was going nowhere and still is, so no change.
    Kemi - did not grab attention, felt like a bystander
    Mordaunt - eclipsed massively by Truss, had no standout moments.

    Sunak's problem is not that he doesn't come across well, it is that he is too slick and won't understand people's concerns. What in tonight's debate provided evidence that addressed this?
    I've never bought into the idea that slick presentation means you cannot understand peoples' concerns. I don't think politicians who imply such things believe it either, since they don't claim it if they/their leader presents well. It is just something they claim if they know they are not as good at presenting as their opponent, so it is fundamentally a dishonest attack when Rishi's counterparts imply it.

    However, I agree that many do think that of Rishi (though I disagree it is because of his slickness), and agree he hasn't addressed that. How can he? If he says he understands people don't believe him.
    It may not be fair but that is life. Sunak's problem is that he was in charge of the Treasury. So when you are making decisions that impact people's income, such as putting up NI, your personal circumstances are going to be even more in the spotlight if you are a very rich individual with a wife that has / had non-Dom status etc.

    Sunak is the candidate Labour would love to face because any decision that has an impact on people's finances - as almost all will - will be contrasted with his wealth and status. It will be a 24 hour shitfest about Rich-y Rishi. And there are plenty of people out there with whom that message will resonate.
    I am Labour and I can assure you this is not right. The one we want is Truss.
    MrEd loves to pretend he knows about Labour politics but has been shown to be a nonsense speaker before. I don’t think he’s ever met a Labour member.
    Horse loves to pretend he knows about me. I was a Labour member during the early Cameron years and met many. I have actually more friends and acquaintances who are left-leaning than right.

    I do like you Horse but you do talk some Horse Shit sometimes.
    I am confused. I thought, MrEd, that you were a horse, named after https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mister_Ed

    Whereas CHB is clearly a *battery*, not a horse.
    Actually, it was more driven by Ed Miliband, the Mr Ed bit was just a by-product of that.

  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,342
    There are two things about Truss I actually like. I like the fact that our Barty met her and they had a good chat about productivity. That shows she's on top of things, and passionate. The second is the fact that she's acknowledged her presentation isn't the best. That acknowledgement is more than May ever managed.

    There's a lot I am not so keen on, but this is a positive post.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,479

    I think Labour will be reasonably content with Truss, Sunak or Mordaunt.

    They’d probably prefer Truss, but Rishi is offering nothing except the highest taxes in 70 years and is not supported by a large chunk of his own party.

    Mordaunt, meanwhile, could surprise on the upside, but chances of her self-destructing seem high.

    Are you saying Badenoch would be the best choice for the Tories?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,316
    TimS said:

    TimS said:

    There’s an oddly concerted, oddly standardised way in which Twitter posts rubbishing the heatwave are focusing on supposed “colour inflation” on BBC maps (which is hilariously wrong, the colours are redder because it’s hotter - colour scheme has hardly changed) and the comparison of “2 days” vs that Blitz of boomer weather lore, 1976.

    Either all these people are having the same idea at once, and using the same painstakingly archived material, or there’s
    something going on.

    I suspect there’s something going on. How much did it cost, lads?

    Hot weather like this has always happened. Someone posted the hottest temps going back a hundred years or so, and back in the early part of the 20th century there were 35 deg days on occasion.
    The difference is that climate change has shifted the dial a few degrees hotter, and hence what might have been mid thirties is likely to near or exceed 40.
    But 1976 was different for longevity. The hot for the next 48 hours is a plume event, 76 was
    a very different thing.
    Thanks for the egg sucking instructions, but you’re completely missing the point of my post.

    But then again perhaps the similarity of your reply to the general gist of those Twitter posts suggests I was wrong and this is just an organic thing rather than anything organised.

    Sorry, I wasn’t really replying to your point. I think there are actually a large number of people out there, rather than a concerted campaign. People have very poor weather memories. Most seem to recall it snowing every winter when they were young, when that’s never been the case, depending on where they lived of course. Likewise with hot weather.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 10,964
    moonshine said:

    Meanwhile Rishi keeps wheeling out the “nation’s credit card” bollox. I’m concerned he actually believes this and plans to run a balanced budget during what might be a fierce economic contraction.

    Mordaunt is bland. No idea what she stands for still. Kemi is there to raise her profile so Rishi can appoint her Chancellor I suspect.

    TT by a mile the best candidate.

    I don’t know what Penny stands for either, but I feel like she understands me and has a solution. (Not really, but she comes over well.) Kemi not coming across so well. Calling herself “brave” sounded like boasting.

    Anyway, I’ve caught up with the debate part I missed. Oh, look, Moulin Rouge is on…
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    edited July 2022
    Andy_JS said:

    I think Labour will be reasonably content with Truss, Sunak or Mordaunt.

    They’d probably prefer Truss, but Rishi is offering nothing except the highest taxes in 70 years and is not supported by a large chunk of his own party.

    Mordaunt, meanwhile, could surprise on the upside, but chances of her self-destructing seem high.

    Are you saying Badenoch would be the best choice for the Tories?
    There’s no one candidate who stands out.
    But I think Badenoch is the only one who potentially offers a break out from what is currently a losing trajectory.

    However she has not done enough to get through, so it’s irrelevant now I think.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,805
    edited July 2022
    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.
  • OnboardG1OnboardG1 Posts: 1,589

    moonshine said:

    Meanwhile Rishi keeps wheeling out the “nation’s credit card” bollox. I’m concerned he actually believes this and plans to run a balanced budget during what might be a fierce economic contraction.

    Mordaunt is bland. No idea what she stands for still. Kemi is there to raise her profile so Rishi can appoint her Chancellor I suspect.

    TT by a mile the best candidate.

    I don’t know what Penny stands for either, but I feel like she understands me and has a solution. (Not really, but she comes over well.) Kemi not coming across so well. Calling herself “brave” sounded like boasting.

    Anyway, I’ve caught up with the debate part I missed. Oh, look, Moulin Rouge is on…
    "Just then an unconscious former Lib Dem fell through the ceiling"
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,342

    There are two things about Truss I actually like. I like the fact that our Barty met her and they had a good chat about productivity. That shows she's on top of things, and passionate. The second is the fact that she's acknowledged her presentation isn't the best. That acknowledgement is more than May ever managed.

    There's a lot I am not so keen on, but this is a positive post.

    Actually think Truss would make a pretry good COTE.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,635
    IshmaelZ said:

    IshmaelZ said:

    Orka said:

    29C at 8pm, central London

    Tomorrow is going to be fearsome

    42s and 43s still showing up in some models

    https://community.netweather.tv/topic/97297-model-output-discussion-record-heat-arriving/page/192/#comments
    Netweather. Fiction.
    That's a link to the discussion forum. I hope you are not suggesting that there is a danger that contributors to specialised internet discussion boards have a deficient understanding of their subject?

    Really just posting for the links in that link to recent models.
    Sorry, my mistake.

    But to be fair, a forum is even less reliable. You'll be basing predictions on PB.com postings next!
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,737

    There are two things about Truss I actually like. I like the fact that our Barty met her and they had a good chat about productivity. That shows she's on top of things, and passionate. The second is the fact that she's acknowledged her presentation isn't the best. That acknowledgement is more than May ever managed.

    There's a lot I am not so keen on, but this is a positive post.

    Actually think Truss would make a pretry good COTE.
    So she has the chance to emulate Japan’s deflationary debt spiral, in her opinion the best managed monetary policy in the world?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 17,316

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    Your first paragraph is pretty much what leave voting @RochdalePioneers thinks we should do, and use complete alignment to have much less friction in trade with the eu. Frankly, I think they are right, but presumably there is too much at stake for the incumbent clowns to do this.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,737

    Andy_JS said:

    I think Labour will be reasonably content with Truss, Sunak or Mordaunt.

    They’d probably prefer Truss, but Rishi is offering nothing except the highest taxes in 70 years and is not supported by a large chunk of his own party.

    Mordaunt, meanwhile, could surprise on the upside, but chances of her self-destructing seem high.

    Are you saying Badenoch would be the best choice for the Tories?
    There’s no one candidate who stands out.
    But I think Badenoch is the only one who potentially offers a break out from what is currently a losing trajectory.

    However she has not done enough to get through, so it’s irrelevant now I think.
    I watched her do the one on one and phone in on LBC and she was great. She’s really struggled in this stilted format

  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,886

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    Depends on what the divergence is. If we take something like food standards, we diverge for the sake of being different and add a shit ton of costs.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,698
    HYUFD said:

    kinabalu said:

    nico679 said:

    Penny doesn’t really stand for much but she looks good and has a calm manner which is quite comforting . I like her voice and I think world leaders would be somewhat star struck when they meet her .

    Not sure what the big deal is on a lack of detail , get a good team and job done .

    Perhaps her Bondish Money Penny styling is clouding my judgement !

    I like her too - but she's not bright or focused enough to be a good PM imo.
    If "Jen" in "The IT Crowd" could be head of the IT Dept without knowing squat about computers, then surely "Penny" of "The BJ Crowd" can be head of the Con Govt.
    Indeed, Mordaunt as PM front woman with Sunak as Chancellor, Tugendhat as Foreign Secretary and Davis as Home Secretary would be fine, maybe Truss at Business and Badenoch as Party Chairman.

    A lot of the PM role is about setting the right direction and selling your government to the country, Reagan was no intellectual but had a top Cabinet full of heavyweights and a brilliant salesman. Brown was also brighter than Blair but Blair was the better PM, Brown more suited to the detail of Chancellor
    You know what HYUFD - this is one of the best posts you have ever written on PB.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    moonshine said:

    Andy_JS said:

    I think Labour will be reasonably content with Truss, Sunak or Mordaunt.

    They’d probably prefer Truss, but Rishi is offering nothing except the highest taxes in 70 years and is not supported by a large chunk of his own party.

    Mordaunt, meanwhile, could surprise on the upside, but chances of her self-destructing seem high.

    Are you saying Badenoch would be the best choice for the Tories?
    There’s no one candidate who stands out.
    But I think Badenoch is the only one who potentially offers a break out from what is currently a losing trajectory.

    However she has not done enough to get through, so it’s irrelevant now I think.
    I watched her do the one on one and phone in on LBC and she was great. She’s really struggled in this stilted format

    She didn’t seem to want the job tonight.
    She’s got a place in the next Cabinet, though, probably as Ed Sec.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,658

    Jacinda Ardern is also a bit dim, is not strong on policy, and very weak on delivery.

    But she’s ridden her ability to project empathy all the way to the top.

    So do not write off Penny.

    Trudeau the same in Canada
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,117
    edited July 2022
    MikeL said:

    HYUFD said:

    kinabalu said:

    nico679 said:

    Penny doesn’t really stand for much but she looks good and has a calm manner which is quite comforting . I like her voice and I think world leaders would be somewhat star struck when they meet her .

    Not sure what the big deal is on a lack of detail , get a good team and job done .

    Perhaps her Bondish Money Penny styling is clouding my judgement !

    I like her too - but she's not bright or focused enough to be a good PM imo.
    If "Jen" in "The IT Crowd" could be head of the IT Dept without knowing squat about computers, then surely "Penny" of "The BJ Crowd" can be head of the Con Govt.
    Indeed, Mordaunt as PM front woman with Sunak as Chancellor, Tugendhat as Foreign Secretary and Davis as Home Secretary would be fine, maybe Truss at Business and Badenoch as Party Chairman.

    A lot of the PM role is about setting the right direction and selling your government to the country, Reagan was no intellectual but had a top Cabinet full of heavyweights and a brilliant salesman. Brown was also brighter than Blair but Blair was the better PM, Brown more suited to the detail of Chancellor
    You know what HYUFD - this is one of the best posts you have ever written on PB.
    Indeed, possibly HYUFD's best post that I've ever seen on here. Better and more concisely put than several journalists I read weekly.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,994
    edited July 2022
    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,886
    edited July 2022

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    Your first paragraph is pretty much what leave voting @RochdalePioneers thinks we should do, and use complete alignment to have much less friction in trade with the eu. Frankly, I think they are right, but presumably there is too much at stake for the incumbent clowns to do this.
    The word friction doesn't get enough consideration. Having voted to quit the EU - the political institution - we alo chose to quit the single market and the customs union. So we now have to compete with a much larger market who subsidises and has cheap labour. If we don't compete our economy is in trouble and we're going to end up beholden to importers having lost our own industry.

    So yes, I want frictionless trade. Because anyone who trades wants frictionless trade. A new diverged standard to show that we can that adds masses of cost for little benefit drives us backwards.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    edited July 2022

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    Depends on what the divergence is. If we take something like food standards, we diverge for the sake of being different and add a shit ton of costs.
    The government - including all the candidates - are still in the impossible situation of pretending that Brexit is an economic bonanza. An increasing number of people don’t believe that.

    The sooner we all agree it is actually economically inconvenient - but was necessary on democratic grounds - the sooner we can go about mitigating what damage there is, and unlocking what opportunities there might be.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,698
    I've been supporting Penny and must confess I've been pretty disappointed by her performances in both debates.

    But I think HYUFD is absolutely correct - she is actually the perfect front person for the Conservatives in very difficult economic times.

    As long as she appoints the highest quality Cabinet - ie doesn't do a Boris deliberately surrounding himself by rubbish people.

    It just might come off.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,635
    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    Er... order, order!
  • jonny83jonny83 Posts: 1,270
    https://twitter.com/itvnews/status/1548757522043002882?t=v2ZiVNofgQfLtBqWDqP-_A&s=19

    A snap Opinium poll of 1,001 people who watched the debate shows Rishi Sunak won, with 24% of those surveyed thinking he performed best, followed by Tom Tugendhat (19%)

    Penny Mordaunt got 17%, followed by Liz Truss (15%) and Kemi Badenoch (12%) https://t.co/dFXRsPHra8 https://t.co/RTEmBebBE5
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,605
    Just got to the end of this debate. I have seen nothing here for Labour to worry about. The Tories look tired.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,479
    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    Why do you think Truss will go up and Badenoch down?
  • Maybe we should have Gove as PM, Rishi as Chancellor, Kemi as Home Sec, Julian Smith as Foreign Sec.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,658
    Sunak wins tonight's debate Opinium finds, Badenoch last

    https://twitter.com/itvnews/status/1548757522043002882?s=20&t=rDKXn6JkLROGUE7v-bzBUQ
  • OnboardG1OnboardG1 Posts: 1,589
    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    I can see Sunak trying to diddle it to ensure that Truss goes out. Not just because he thinks he'll win vs Mordaunt but because I actually think he hates Truss.
  • OnboardG1OnboardG1 Posts: 1,589
    edited July 2022
    Jonathan said:

    Just got to the end of this debate. I have seen nothing here for Labour to worry about. The Tories look tired.

    The worst thing to look in politics. Tired and Emotional might be more accurate though.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 28,342

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    Kinnocks gonna Kinnock.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,009
    edited July 2022

    I think Labour will be reasonably content with Truss, Sunak or Mordaunt.

    They’d probably prefer Truss, but Rishi is offering nothing except the highest taxes in 70 years and is not supported by a large chunk of his own party.

    Mordaunt, meanwhile, could surprise on the upside, but chances of her self-destructing seem high.

    I think the truth is that they're all unknown quantities, except partially Sunak. Boris has dominated government to such an extent in his attempt to be a President in a Prime Ministerial system that it's very difficult to see how any of them will perform, no matter how many debates we have.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    OnboardG1 said:

    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    I can see Sunak trying to diddle it to ensure that Truss goes out. Not just because he thinks he'll win vs Mordaunt but because I actually think he hates Truss.
    I don’t think he likes challenge, and Truss is the only one to really do so.

    I rather suspect he has marked Kemi down now too for the impertinence of her fraud question.

  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,005
    Badenough had to knock it out of the park tonight to stand any chance of becoming the Right choice ahead of The Truss.

    She didn't. So the last three is now nailed on.

    I'm assuming Kemi endorses Liz, but if not then Penny will be a happy bunny.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,994
    Andy_JS said:

    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    Why do you think Truss will go up and Badenoch down?
    Truss has received endorsements from Braverman and other significant Brexity types, and her performance was punchy and confident, very much framing it as her vs Sunak. I think it will have reassured that wing she is the right candidate and Sunak's lame attempt to derail her as a former LD and remainer will only make them more determined to back her.

    Badenoch had a quiet evening, but even without that after the impressive opening rounds I feel like the MPs will have been thinking about her lack of experience over the weekend. I think she and Tugendhat will both suffer as their backers ponder what the point is of continuing to back them when they clearly will not be in the running much longer, so I think some of hers will drift away.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 119,492

    NEW THREAD

  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Jonathan said:

    Just got to the end of this debate. I have seen nothing here for Labour to worry about. The Tories look tired.

    No. If you want to see what Labour should be worried about look no further than Sir 'Kin' Scintillating.
  • jonny83jonny83 Posts: 1,270

    Badenough had to knock it out of the park tonight to stand any chance of becoming the Right choice ahead of The Truss.

    She didn't. So the last three is now nailed on.

    I'm assuming Kemi endorses Liz, but if not then Penny will be a happy bunny.

    I think she's going to endorse Sunak.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,842
    nico679 said:


    Not sure what the big deal is on a lack of detail , get a good team and job done .


    Especially since anyone with any sense knows that almost all of the detail we are getting from any of them is complete nonsense, either never going to happen or the wrong thing to try and do.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 12,928
    edited July 2022
    I think this is shaping up to be a nightmare for most of us but a dream for Labour.

    Mordaunt really seems to have fluffed her lines. Badenoch won’t quite make the cut, so it’s going to end up being a runoff between dull and flawed but fundamentally fairly professional Rishi, and Truss.

    The membership will vote for Liz. She will prove to be every big as bad as her predecessor, and surrounded by the same clowns. Meanwhile the economy will get worse as will relations with the EU and the coherence of the Union, The public will think “bigger this for a laugh” and seriously shit on
    the Tories in 2024.

    Out of all the candidates, the one who will generate zero polling bounce or even a new nadir is Truss.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    edited July 2022

    Badenough had to knock it out of the park tonight to stand any chance of becoming the Right choice ahead of The Truss.

    She didn't. So the last three is now nailed on.

    I'm assuming Kemi endorses Liz, but if not then Penny will be a happy bunny.

    Kemi will not endorse. She wants a job.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,037
    moonshine said:

    Did all those saying Truss did better watch the same thing as me?! Does no one have anything to say about her praising the Bank of Japan for “keeping inflation low”? What a helmet. All those years round Cabinet and her grasp of economics is frighteningly poor.

    Wait.

    Who said that the BoJ did a great job keeping inflation low? That's a spectacularly moronic comment.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,037

    I was recently watching Stephen Kinnock at a Britain in Changing Europe event. Interesting that he was against any kind of regulatory divergence with the EU. So although Labour's policy is NOT to rejoin the single market and customs union they want us to comply with all the rules anyway. Presumably this is so we can rejoin the SM and CU at some point without too much difficulty.

    Before you mock him it isn't clear that the conservative party has much of an idea either. We left because we didn't want to be subjugated to the EU's rules. However we'll happily copy whatever rules they have and may also introduce in future so we can trade easily with them. So we have inflicted a substantial amount of economic pain on ourselves for effectively nothing. We do have control of migration policy now but the response at the moment is to import essential workers from outside of Europe to replace the ones who have gone home to Spain etc. I'm not sure this is what leavers had in mind.

    Do we want to chart our own path or not? And I notice there has been almost no talk in the Tory leadership debate about Northern Ireland. I would have thought that with Johnson, the man who flat out lied to them, removed from power it might be slightly easier to resolve the internal border issue. Perhaps we'll just continue with the 'we'll threaten a trade war if you insist on us sticking to the agreement we signed' approach.

    I have no problem with regulatory divergence, but it is worth noting that there is likely to be only a very small market for products that don't comply with FCC, UL and CE standards.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,922

    Orka said:

    29C at 8pm, central London

    Tomorrow is going to be fearsome


    Bedford, and Wittering both showing a 40°C Met Office forecast for Tuesday.

    Both official Met Office stations, so we will be able to rely on the actual results.
    At first, when I saw Bedford and Wittering, I thought it was going to be a comment about OGH.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,552
    moonshine said:

    There are two things about Truss I actually like. I like the fact that our Barty met her and they had a good chat about productivity. That shows she's on top of things, and passionate. The second is the fact that she's acknowledged her presentation isn't the best. That acknowledgement is more than May ever managed.

    There's a lot I am not so keen on, but this is a positive post.

    Actually think Truss would make a pretry good COTE.
    So she has the chance to emulate Japan’s deflationary debt spiral, in her opinion the best managed monetary policy in the world?
    Managing deflation from this starting position would be quite some feat!
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,518

    There are two things about Truss I actually like. I like the fact that our Barty met her and they had a good chat about productivity. That shows she's on top of things, and passionate. The second is the fact that she's acknowledged her presentation isn't the best. That acknowledgement is more than May ever managed.

    There's a lot I am not so keen on, but this is a positive post.

    Yes, I thought that did good damage limitation - a bit of humility and allowed her to spin it is "I may not be a brilliaint speaker, but I deliver".
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,307

    Maybe we should have Gove as PM, Rishi as Chancellor, Kemi as Home Sec, Julian Smith as Foreign Sec.

    There is no circumstance where Gove would ever be the right choice as PM.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578
    kle4 said:

    So, second round was:

    Sunak - 101
    Mordaunt - 83
    Truss - 64
    Badenoch - 49
    Tugendhat - 32
    Braverman - 27

    Prediction for the next round:

    Sunak - 116 (+13)
    Mordaunt - 88 (+5)
    Truss - 84 (+20)
    Badenoch - 45 (-4)
    Tugendhat - 25 (-7)

    Penny loses the big mo but just retains her place. Badenoch and Tom run out of steam.

    Tom then endorses Mordaunt, and she slightly increases her lead over Truss.

    Badenoch's support then splits mostly for Truss and some for Sunak, putting Sunak and Truss in the final two by a gnat's whisker.

    Prediction for the fourth round:

    Sunak - 119 (+6)
    Mordaunt - 104 (+16)
    Truss - 92 (+8)
    Badenoch - 40 (-5)

    Prediction for the final round:

    Sunak - 133 (+14)
    Mordaunt - 110 (+6)
    Truss - 112 (+20)

    Not sure about this.

    Take a look at Nick's summary about how well each one came across personality-wise. I'm not saying Nick is right (and there seems to be a wide range of opinions on her about who did well) but he is an ex-MP and so may have a better understanding of how MPs look at these things. I thought his comment about Badenoch was interesting in that she seems to be looking to broaden her appeal and she probably benefits from Friday's Con Home survey. Truss did enough tonight to probably stop the doubts but I don't see why Sunak would pick up so many votes as his performance tonight was pretty much like his performance on Friday.

    TT definitely looks out after tonight. The one I would question about is Penny M. I didn't think she was that great and her closing statement was a bit weak. I can see a few of her backers thinking that she will never get over the self-ID when it comes to the membership and, together with not that inspiring a performance, wondering should they switch.

    I think the only safe assumption I would make about this race at the moment is that TT will be out tomorrow.


  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 27,745

    Betfair next prime minister
    2.76 Rishi Sunak 36%
    2.9 Penny Mordaunt 34%
    6.6 Liz Truss 15%
    7.6 Kemi Badenoch 13%
    95 Tom Tugendhat
    130 Dominic Raab

    To make the final two
    1.09 Rishi Sunak 92%
    1.5 Penny Mordaunt 67%
    3.05 Liz Truss 33%
    5.3 Kemi Badenoch 19%
    48 Tom Tugendhat

    Next PM
    2.58 Rishi Sunak 39%
    3.3 Penny Mordaunt 30%
    4.7 Liz Truss 21%
    8.4 Kemi Badenoch 12%
    110 Dominic Raab
    110 Tom Tugendhat

    Next Con leader
    2.58 Rishi Sunak 39%
    3.45 Penny Mordaunt 29%
    4.8 Liz Truss 21%
    8.2 Kemi Badenoch 12%
    100 Tom Tugendhat

    To make the final two
    1.07 Rishi Sunak 93%
    1.55 Penny Mordaunt 65%
    2.62 Liz Truss 38%
    5.8 Kemi Badenoch 17%
    90 Tom Tugendhat

    ETA we've mentioned this before but it is worth noting there is not enough money in these markets for the bot-writers to link them, so occasionally odd gaps open up.
    Pre-debate Betfair.

    Next PM
    2.54 Rishi Sunak 39%
    3.25 Penny Mordaunt 31%
    5.7 Liz Truss 18%
    8.8 Kemi Badenoch 11%
    100 Tom Tugendhat
    150 Dominic Raab

    Next Con Leader
    2.5 Rishi Sunak 40%
    3.15 Penny Mordaunt 32%
    5.5 Liz Truss 18%
    8.6 Kemi Badenoch 12%
    110 Tom Tugendhat

    To make the final two
    1.08 Rishi Sunak 93%
    1.66 Penny Mordaunt 60%
    2.64 Liz Truss 38%
    5.6 Kemi Badenoch 18%
    60 Tom Tugendhat
    End of debate. Raab's drifted!

    Next PM
    2.4 Rishi Sunak 42%
    3.35 Penny Mordaunt 30%
    4.9 Liz Truss 20%
    11 Kemi Badenoch 9%
    100 Tom Tugendhat
    230 Dominic Raab

    Next Con Leader
    2.4 Rishi Sunak 42%
    3.15 Penny Mordaunt 32%
    4.9 Liz Truss 20%
    12.5 Kemi Badenoch 8%
    130 Tom Tugendhat

    To make the final two
    1.07 Rishi Sunak 93%
    1.51 Penny Mordaunt 66%
    2.52 Liz Truss 40%
    6 Kemi Badenoch 17%
    60 Tom Tugendhat
    One hour later (or end of debate on +1)

    Betfair next prime minister
    2.36 Rishi Sunak 42%
    3.4 Penny Mordaunt 29%
    4.7 Liz Truss 21%
    13.5 Kemi Badenoch 7%
    140 Tom Tugendhat
    220 Dominic Raab

    Next Conservative leader
    2.38 Rishi Sunak 42%
    3.3 Penny Mordaunt 30%
    4.5 Liz Truss 22%
    14 Kemi Badenoch 7%
    170 Tom Tugendhat

    To be in final two
    1.06 Rishi Sunak 94%
    1.7 Penny Mordaunt 59%
    2.46 Liz Truss 41%
    10 Kemi Badenoch 10%
    100 Tom Tugendhat
  • JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,287
    edited July 2022
    Don't know how HYUFD feels, but my sense (certainly talking to folks on Friday in now super marginal Esher and Walton) is that Sunak can beat Truss. His Thatcherite fiscally responsible line will command a (grudging) respect from members.

    Not predicting that outcome yet, but the notion that Liz will be the inevitable victor is fanciful.

    PS And being on the same side as Dominic Raab is slightly perturbing... but needs must.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,297

    Sen. Ted Cruz says the Supreme Court was “clearly wrong” and “overreaching” when it legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.

    https://twitter.com/NBCNews/status/1548676670575501318

    The rights we now enjoy can always be reversed. AS anyone commenting on the current trans nonsense should consider.
    We know. There is currently a very determined campaign to remove rights women currently have under the Equality Act, something you choose to ignore.

  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 42,467
    Cyclefree said:

    Sen. Ted Cruz says the Supreme Court was “clearly wrong” and “overreaching” when it legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.

    https://twitter.com/NBCNews/status/1548676670575501318

    The rights we now enjoy can always be reversed. AS anyone commenting on the current trans nonsense should consider.
    We know. There is currently a very determined campaign to remove rights women currently have under the Equality Act, something you choose to ignore.

    "choose to ignore."

    Now now, Ms Free. Do not lie.
This discussion has been closed.