Hotchilidog
Well-known member
- Jan 24, 2009
- 9,120
This.
Could still be Truss v Mordant as the final two.
Rishi may have 'peaked'?
As Rishi looks more uncertain to win the members vote, this could be case.
This.
Could still be Truss v Mordant as the final two.
Rishi may have 'peaked'?
Sunak is also going to be moving to India at some indeterminate point in the future, potentially tomorrow. Simply on this basis, I am not sure how he can be taken in anyway seriously.
See my thread about Elizabeth Holmes. When someone can tell people what they want to hear in a way that makes them want to believe them, common sense is left at the door. Who and what you believe are driven by confirmation biases. If you never liked unions, the EU or the nanny state, then you want to believe the cheeky chap who looks you in the eye and says, don't worry, I'll fix it, and cracks a couple of jokes. That's how it worked. And even his detractors tell us he got Brexit done and saved us all from Covid and Corbyn. Only those inside the machine (conservative MPs) can see the truth, and even though they ditched him ruthlessly they remain desperate to convince the public this is simply a slight change in presentation . . . . .
Whether you buy this or not will be determined by your confirmation bias.
As Rishi looks more uncertain to win the members vote, this could be case.
Out of interest, are there any NSC posters with an Indian heritage? I'm keen to understand how someone like Suella Braverman can be so anti-immigrant....her parents came here in the 60s, but presumably now would have difficulty getting into the UK. It seems she is happy to have benefited from the UK's relatively light touch immigration controls fifty or sixty years ago, but now doesn't appear to want others to have the same advantages. But maybe that's just basic Conservatism....look out for yourself!
Suella Braverman out
I'm quite interested in what attracts you to Sunak as PM.
Given that Sunak has been in the second most senior position in the country, with particular responsibility for the economy throughout the vast majority of Johnson's premiership, what sort of radical changes do you think he's now going to bring to the table to reverse the impending economic disaster, that he hasn't in the last 2.5 years ?
Or are you looking simply for the stability of more of the same ?
As a business owner, my company (and myself as an individual) pay a lot of tax
No problem with paying tax - in fact I'd rather pay more providing it went to the right people and places, i.e. front line health workers etc.
Problem is (and my wife works in the public sector so I see/hear first hand the issues) I see the incredible amount of waste, multi-tiered management levels, unsustainable pensions in local government etc.
Raise taxes by all means, but make sure those taxes are spent wisely.
Out of interest, are there any NSC posters with an Indian heritage? I'm keen to understand how someone like Suella Braverman can be so anti-immigrant....her parents came here in the 60s, but presumably now would have difficulty getting into the UK. It seems she is happy to have benefited from the UK's relatively light touch immigration controls fifty or sixty years ago, but now doesn't appear to want others to have the same advantages. But maybe that's just basic Conservatism....look out for yourself!
Have you watched the Holmes docu drama on Disney?
And has she been sentenced yet?
Out of interest, are there any NSC posters with an Indian heritage? I'm keen to understand how someone like Suella Braverman can be so anti-immigrant....her parents came here in the 60s, but presumably now would have difficulty getting into the UK. It seems she is happy to have benefited from the UK's relatively light touch immigration controls fifty or sixty years ago, but now doesn't appear to want others to have the same advantages. But maybe that's just basic Conservatism....look out for yourself!
She's not alone. There have been and are people throughout history who align with parties that would normally be against them. Republicans are actively taking rights away from women, yet there are plenty of women who will join the republicans. Caitlin Jenner has come out in support of a republican party (tried to run as a republican politician on a republican platform of taking rights away from trans people). Black people, LGBTQ+ people have sided with powerful people in the past and today. It's the same as the women who try to fight feminism.
Obviously, there isn't one reason that applies to all, but it the most common reasons tend to be as you the basic idea of looking out for yourself. But that isn't always about a selfish grasp for power, sometimes it's about survival. When you're part of a marginalised community, sometimes siding with the abusers/oppressors is a way of self-protection - 'don't attack me, I'm one of the good ones! I'm on your side, look I'll keep them down just like you!' By agreeing with the powerful, embracing their ideas, there's the hope they won't turn on you.
I imagine there are also less sympathetic reason. Sometimes it is about greed or selfish grasp for power. Sometimes it's about self hate. There are probably other reasons.
I wouldn't want to claim which is the reason for Suella specifically, but there are a range of possibilities.
The five candidates who have made it through are:
Rishi Sunak - 101 votes
Penny Mordaunt - 83 votes
Liz Truss - 64 votes
Kemi Badenoch - 49 votes
Tom Tugendhat - 32 votes
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Not aiming this at any specific post or poster, but I feel a certain concern when those who habitually don’t vote for the Conservatives wish the stupidest/most lethal candidate on us.
We will all (regardless of political allegiance) have to live in whatever environment our incoming Prime Minister creates, and as a British citizen I want our country to be respectable and respected.
Personally I would prefer Tom Tugendhat as PM, but fear he may not have sufficient support among the membership, leaving Penny Mordaunt as potentially the least worst option out of the unholy trinity of Sunak/Mordaunt/Truss.
Well, that is going to be good for the country isn’t it and just what we need.
Presumably you have said that more in the interest of the Labour Party than the country.
I wouldn’t want her as PM.
Come on Roger, a properly run Labour Party should be able to beat the Conservatives at the next election, whoever is voted leader, but let us not wish someone whom you consider more incompetent than Johnson to run the country, in the meantime.
Had hoped that Tom Tugendhat might have made a credible fist of it. Right up to the point where he held that 'impromptu press conference' outside parliament. Sadly just came across at that point as fairly seriously unhinged
Oh, I haven’t heard about that, what happened?