Question Author
ToraToraTora
//fatti: "That’s their problem Gulliver, the best all-round candidate won’t get anywhere near leadership of the party.
It’ll cost them at the GE, guaranteed. " - dream on they could elect Dylin and still beat Labour.//
There you go again, spouting the wrong stuff at the wrong time, strait of yours.
It’s not Labour you need to worry about, it’s a combination of them, the Lib Dems, disillusion with the party by the faithful and voter apathy.
So far none of your wild predictions are anywhere near the mark and you still look stupid over your ‘and by what mechanism will they get rid of Boris’ bovine faeces we all laughed at.
In case you missed it, here’s the final part from the Guardian link.
There was little love in the room for any of the candidates
Applause was sporadic, and mostly directed either at Tugendhat, or when Sunak was singing the praises of an NHS worker who had asked a question. At the end Krishnan Guru-Murthy asked for a show of hands of the floating voters in the audience who had been persuaded to be more likely to vote Conservative. Ten hands went up at most.
It wasn’t a feral BBC Question Time audience, but at times, particularly when issues around trust and Partygate were being touched upon, the disdain for the audience with politicians was palpable. Whoever wins out of this contest in the end, they have an uphill climb.