24-10-2022, 19:19
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#31
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cf.mega poster
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Iain Dale on LBC saying there is rumours of Jeremy Hunt be replaced as chancellor
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24-10-2022, 19:52
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#32
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Remoaner
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave42
Iain Dale on LBC saying there is rumours of Jeremy Hunt be replaced as chancellor
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That would be stupid but I guess Sunak at least has experience in the role so might have something specific instead.
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24-10-2022, 21:38
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#33
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Cable Forum Team
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
The website that deals with Tory member cancellations has crashed tonight.
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24-10-2022, 22:20
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#34
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Remoaner
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Will they care? They're not as dependent on individual members as the Labour Party is, they don't need their money.
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24-10-2022, 22:20
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#35
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laeva recumbens anguis
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfman
We can all pick and choose lines, Hugh.
I'm not quite sure that an appropriate description for someone who has actually held one of the Great Offices of State - during the economic turmoil of the pandemic of all times. I can think of 750 million reasons not to think Sunak will be a good PM but relative inexperience (compared to who?) isn't one of them.
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Appropriate for someone who was appointed to be Johnson’s lapdog, when Javid resigned as Chancellor after refusing a demand from Johnson and Cummings that he dismiss his advisers.
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24-10-2022, 22:25
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#36
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Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Jun 2003
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Damien
Will they care? They're not as dependent on individual members as the Labour Party is, they don't need their money.
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They should, it’s the membership base which campaigns door to door. If you piss off the membership base, squander your election chances with zero help with campaigning.
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24-10-2022, 22:31
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#37
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Sulking in the Corner
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mick
They should, it’s the membership base which campaigns door to door. If you piss off the membership base, squander your election chances with zero help with campaigning.
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I stopped assisting with local campaigns since 2017, but I've kept up my membership.
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24-10-2022, 22:37
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#38
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Architect of Ideas
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 10,515
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hugh
Appropriate for someone who was appointed to be Johnson’s lapdog, when Javid resigned as Chancellor after refusing a demand from Johnson and Cummings that he dismiss his advisers.
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This analysis conflates the circumstances of his appointment with his performance in the role and/or experience gained. The paradox being that he needs experience, but should delay stepping up so he only takes promotion on morally superior grounds? Under Johnson that's almost impossible.
Indeed if being appointed for circumstances other than doing Johnson's bidding would result in a very short tenure in any post. As Javid demonstrated. Twice.
I've no real interest in continuing a back and forth, as I say there's enough reasons to not like Rishi without adding this one to the list. The Tories need to draw a line under the past and to an extent that needs someone relatively new. I'd have preferred Penny to underline the past to move the party past Brexit to be an effective opposition to the next Labour government.
---------- Post added at 22:37 ---------- Previous post was at 22:33 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mick
They should, it’s the membership base which campaigns door to door. If you piss off the membership base, squander your election chances with zero help with campaigning.
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Fundamentally neither party gives a shit about the grass roots. Between the media and corporate interests there's enough money and influence around to keep the proletariat in check.
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24-10-2022, 22:45
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#39
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Remoaner
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mick
They should, it’s the membership base which campaigns door to door. If you piss off the membership base, squander your election chances with zero help with campaigning.
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Maybe but again the Tories have never been a campaigning force on the ground. It's something they've tried to address with battle buses and so on but it's been difficult for them. They are usually more about the 'air war', i.e media campaigning.
Membership is more important for Labour as a higher % of their funding comes from them and they do depend on a lot of door-to-door campaigning.
It's one reason Labour are in trouble as they had two elections in three years which depleted funds and then lost a lot of members.
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25-10-2022, 00:11
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#40
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Dec 2013
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave42
Iain Dale on LBC saying there is rumours of Jeremy Hunt be replaced as chancellor
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Sky News saying Hunt will stay in position. Must be reassuring for the markets although Hunt was pretty much enacting Sunak's policies once he was appointed.
---------- Post added at 00:11 ---------- Previous post was at 00:06 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Damien
Maybe but again the Tories have never been a campaigning force on the ground. It's something they've tried to address with battle buses and so on but it's been difficult for them. They are usually more about the 'air war', i.e media campaigning.
Membership is more important for Labour as a higher % of their funding comes from them and they do depend on a lot of door-to-door campaigning.
It's one reason Labour are in trouble as they had two elections in three years which depleted funds and then lost a lot of members.
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Labour have recovered a lot of membership recently
https://www.theguardian.com/politics...neral-election
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25-10-2022, 00:51
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#41
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1andrew1
Looking forward to all that money from the north being diverted down south to help us poor Londoners out. After splashing out £550m for Bond Street Crossrail Station we're rather skint!
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Well, during his last campaign to be leader/PM Sunak did say that he'd reduce funding for poorer areas and give it to more affluent areas.
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25-10-2022, 00:52
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#42
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Trollsplatter
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Amidst today’s excitement, it seems to have passed largely unnoticed that the 1922 Committee confirmed Boris actually did have 100 nominations and could have forced a contest had he chosen to.
https://order-order.com/2022/10/24/1...d-the-numbers/
He chose not to, after flying home. Why, is a matter of speculation.
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25-10-2022, 01:09
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#43
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Architect of Ideas
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 10,515
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris
Amidst today’s excitement, it seems to have passed largely unnoticed that the 1922 Committee confirmed Boris actually did have 100 nominations and could have forced a contest had he chosen to.
https://order-order.com/2022/10/24/1...d-the-numbers/
He chose not to, after flying home. Why, is a matter of speculation.
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Guido.
So we are trusting the word of one person who spoke to another person? (a Boris supporter?- an 80% chance according to Guido for person 2, but only 20% for person one on anything independently verified ) that paperwork for a nomination entirely hypothetical actually existed.
Do they fax them in one by one?
The election of President Xi to his third term is objectively more transparent and more credible.
Last edited by jfman; 25-10-2022 at 01:20.
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25-10-2022, 07:30
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#44
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Remoaner
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 32,279
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris
Amidst today’s excitement, it seems to have passed largely unnoticed that the 1922 Committee confirmed Boris actually did have 100 nominations and could have forced a contest had he chosen to.
https://order-order.com/2022/10/24/1...d-the-numbers/
He chose not to, after flying home. Why, is a matter of speculation.
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I guess to gave in to the pressure not to stand then? If he had a 102 then the prospect of scrapping though and winning the job with such little support actually did give him 2nd thoughts.
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25-10-2022, 08:30
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#45
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Trollsplatter
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Re: Rishi Sunak to become PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by jfman
Guido.
So we are trusting the word of one person who spoke to another person? (a Boris supporter?- an 80% chance according to Guido for person 2, but only 20% for person one on anything independently verified ) that paperwork for a nomination entirely hypothetical actually existed.
Do they fax them in one by one?
The election of President Xi to his third term is objectively more transparent and more credible.
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I appreciate this news demolishes your own pet theory, however Guido has put a named MP member on the record who in turn has named the 1922’s joint secretary. There’s more than enough explicit finger-pointing there for, at the very least, an indignant tweet from those concerned, if it’s untrue or inaccurate.
Don’t take it personally. In the end all any of us is doing is speculation and educated guesswork, your personal prestige isn’t on the line for guessing wrong.
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