Abernathy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 05, 2024 11:53 am
Interesting take on matters that came up on O'Brien earlier - a recently retired lawyer called in to opine that she thought that Starmer actually knew that Sunak's £2000 of extra taxes lie was indeed a massive lie, and actually had had sight of James Bowler's letter in advance of the "debate", but in essence gave Sunak enough rope during the debate by not refuting it immediately (though importantly he did refute it near the end of proceedings). What this does is allow Labour/Starmer to assert- correctly and accurately - that Sunak is a proven (as evidenced by James Bowler's letter) liar.
Starmer has done this before. You will recall a PMQs session about 4 years ago in which Boris Johnson, in response to Starmer's questioning, stood at the despatch box and blatantly lied about an aspect of "Partygate". Starmer recognised the lie, and merely said "I think we will just leave that there." before moving on. Starmer knew that Johnson's lie would be recorded in Hansard, and would ultimately be a key element in bringing about Johnson's downfall. This is rather similar.
Whether this is the killer final nail in Sunak's coffin or not remains to be seen, and I'm really not sure whether it will be or not. It is at least a very interesting take. I don't think it'll move the dial much on Labour's lead.
I sometimes think we overestimate the power of debating tricks.
Especially when 80%+ of the press are cheerleading for the other team.
Having said that, there's grist for the Labour campaign mill.
Done right, millions of "Sunak caught with pants of fire" messages can flood the etherwaves for 4 weeks.
As ever, it's not a three word slogan.
Can it cut through the barrage of Farage and "yeah but Corbyn"?