- Sat Aug 31, 2024 11:25 pm
#75403
It makes the 1997 choice of Clarke, Hague, Lilley. Howard and Redwood seem like a gathering of political titans.
satnav wrote:Reminding people of the failed Rwanda Policy really doesn't seem like a smart move given how much the policy cost.It's James Cleverley. You don't expect smart from James Cleverley.
Crabcakes wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 3:19 pm So so far we have:They've improved in the polls since the election just by dumping their crap on the new government, and media help (not all from the right either).
Be more bigoted/cruel
Listen less
Tax bungs for the well off
I was not responsible for our terrible performance
And that applies to *every* candidate. Not one of them have anything even approaching interesting to say.
Absolutely convinced now that there will be no Tory challenge until 2035(ish) election at the earliest, let alone chance of them winning. They have nothing to offer and no one who you’d trust to deliver it.
Crabcakes wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 3:19 pmI suspect they're going for the Reform/Kip style "outrage" campaigning model. Say nothing works, point out the failures of the government, promise anything, whip up a cloud of toxic tribalism to deflect any criticism, get back in, do nothing while shouting about "the system", get booted out, repeat....
Absolutely convinced now that there will be no Tory challenge until 2035(ish) election at the earliest, let alone chance of them winning. They have nothing to offer and no one who you’d trust to deliver it.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 3:33 pmIsn’t this usually the case, not sure that speech was a good idea last week mind.Crabcakes wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 3:19 pm So so far we have:They've improved in the polls since the election just by dumping their crap on the new government, and media help (not all from the right either).
Be more bigoted/cruel
Listen less
Tax bungs for the well off
I was not responsible for our terrible performance
And that applies to *every* candidate. Not one of them have anything even approaching interesting to say.
Absolutely convinced now that there will be no Tory challenge until 2035(ish) election at the earliest, let alone chance of them winning. They have nothing to offer and no one who you’d trust to deliver it.
satnav wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 7:21 pm The first job any new leader will have to do is decide how they are going to approach the Reform Party. Unless the Tories can win back the millions of Tory voters who switched to Reform at the last election. Trying to be more extreme than Reform on immigration isn't really going to hack it. Reform can propose any rubbish knowing that they will never have to deliver but if the Tories put forward similar policies they will be closely scrutinized and pick apart particularly by the lawyers on the Tory benches in the Lords.The Tories lost four seats to Reform.
Oboogie wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2024 9:13 pmGood point - your average Reform voter is more likely to be a "fuck off the lot of you" stay at home type than a 'floating' voter. They voted Tory in 2019 because to a large degree they finally had a party on the list that met their approval.
The Tories lost four seats to Reform.
They lost far more to the LibDems, let alone Labour.
Long may the Tories charge down the road leading away from the battlefield.
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