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    Tory members flood online groups with sexists slurs over Penny Mordaunt and declare Farage debate winner

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailPanicking Tory members reacted angrily to Penny Mordaunt‘s performance in the seven-way election debate, flooding an online message board with furious comments.With the debate on ITV starting just hours after a YouGov poll put Nigel Farage’s Reform UK ahead of the Tories, morale was low among Conservative activists.Leaked messages from a Conservative members only Facebook group showed that activists took out their frustration on Ms Mordaunt as she battled with Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner, Mr Farage, Daisy Cooper from the Lib Dems and representatives of the SNP, Plaid Cymru and the Greens.The Conservative Party Members Group, a private group for verified members, has over 3,000 Conservative members including MPs such as Andrew Rosindell, Joy Morrisey, John Penrose and Virginia Crosby. Penny Mordaunt on the debate More

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    Sunak confident Tories will not come third at general election after latest damaging poll

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak has rejected suggestions the Conservatives will come in third place behind Reform UK at the general election, after a new demoralising poll. for the party.Speaking to reporters on the final day of the G7 summit in Italy, the prime minister said there was plenty of time for a “comeback” and the choice between the Tories and Labour will “crystallise for people between now and polling day”.His comments come after a devastating YouGov poll for the prime minister which has Nigel Farage’s party at 19 per cent and the Conservatives on 18 per cent in voting intention.Mr Sunak said: “We are only halfway through this election, so I’m still fighting very hard for every vote.“And what that poll shows is – the only poll that matters is the one on July 4 – but if that poll was replicated on July 4, it would be handing Labour a blank cheque to tax everyone, tax their home, their pension, their car, their family, and I’ll be fighting very hard to make sure that doesn’t happen.Mr Sunak claims Labour would raise the tax burden to the highest level in the country’s history More

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    Tory minister rules out doing deal with Reform despite poll gap closing

    A Conservative minister ruled out doing a deal with the Reform Party despite falling behind them in a poll for the first time.Bim Afolami, the economic secretary to the Treasury, was quizzed by Sky News presenter Anna Jones on if the Conservative Party would consider a deal with Reform. A YouGov survey has Nigel Farage’s party on 19 per cent, ahead of the Conservatives on 18 per cent. “I am not worried about it, it is one poll,” Mr Afolami said in response.”In that one poll, it shows that if you do not vote Conservative if you are a Conservative-minded person, a vote for Reform is a vote for Keir Starmer.” More

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    Curtice warns that YouGov poll putting Reform ahead proves ‘things are going backwards’ for Tories

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe YouGov poll putting Reform ahead of the Tories for the first time has divided two of Britain’s leading polling experts over the real state of support for Nigel Farage’s party.Professor Sir John Curtice suggested on Radio 4’s Today programme this morning that while Reform’s average rating of 16 percent in the polls “may be slightly on the high side” he believes it is around 15 percent.The average 16 percent rating for polls was the finding of Techne UK fo The Independent yesterday.The polling guru put the rise in support for the rightwing party down to Nigel Farage’s decision to run in the general election as a candidate in Clacton and said that the results of surveys “fit the broad trends” of the election so far.John Curtice believes Labour and the Tories are going backwards More

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    ITV election debate – live: Farage claims Tories ‘about to implode’ as Reform overtakes party in poll

    Key takeaways from Labour’s general election manifestoSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailNigel Farage has claimed the Conservative Party is “about to implode” as his Reform UK party overtook the Tories in the latest YouGov poll. In his closing speech of the seven-way ITV debate on Thursday night, the Reform leader said: “Britain is broken, everyone knows it and Britain needs Reform. “Rishi Sunak won’t do it, he’ll probably be in California by then anyway. And the Tory Party is split down the middle and about to implode in this election.” It comes as he declared that his Reform Party is “now the opposition to Labour” after a YouGov poll published by The Times showed them one per cent above the Conservatives. “Just before we came on air we overtook the Conservatives in the national opinion polls,” Mr Farage said, as he made his opening speech during an ITV debate. “We are now the opposition to Labour.”Immigration, education and taxes were the centrepiece topics for the seven-way debate with Angela Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, taking the brunt of the other leaders’ questions. Show latest update 1718330400Labour manifesto admits Covid corruption tsar may raise no money at allFull report: Matt Mathers14 June 2024 03:001718327726From cats to dog whistlesTaking a question about immigration, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth accused Nigel Farage of having been on “a dog-whistle tour of the UK for many, many years and exploiting the anxiety that people have”.The Plaid leader said: “We need to heed and listen to people who have genuine concerns about the impact of the movement of population, pressures on public services, but we have to put that in the context of public spending cuts by the Conservatives.”Angela Rayner had said: “What we need at the moment is a skills strategy. We have not had an industrial and skills strategy, so what we have is we’ve been over-reliant in our economy from overseas workers to fill our skills gap, and they’ve done a tremendous job in doing that and we have needed that, but what we really need is, as employment levels have gone higher again, is we need to really match those skills to give people opportunity to take those jobs.”Nigel Farage replied: “Well, it’s funny Angela Rayner says that because Labour today launched their six key priorities at the General Election and didn’t mention the single most important issue affecting the lives of everybody in this country, namely the population explosion caused directly by migration.”Tom Watling14 June 2024 02:151718326800The EU-sized hole in Starmer’s ‘growth, growth, growth’ manifesto…You wouldn’t know it from Keir Starmer’s speech at his manifesto launch, but transforming Britain’s relationship with Europe – just as it shifts further to the right – will be one of his biggest priorities in office, says Andrew Grice. Read Andrew’s piece in full here: Matt Mathers14 June 2024 02:001718323200Watch: Reform UK’s party election broadcast: Six words on a screen for four minutesReform UK’s party election broadcast: Six words on a screen for four minutes Reform UK unveiled their party political broadcast on Thursday night (13 June) with no audio and the same six words on-screen for four minutes. The text read: “Britain is Broken. Britain Needs Reform.” Reform leader Nigel Farage tweeted the same video, reassuring those who watched the broadcast that their “TV isn’t broken”. The message aired on the same evening that a new YouGov poll suggested the party has overtaken the Conservatives for the first time ahead of next month’s general election. In the survey, Reform were put on 19 per cent, ahead of the Tories on 18 per cent. Labour remained top on 37 per cent.Matt Mathers14 June 2024 01:001718319660ICYMI: Sunak’s Tories hit Truss level of all-time low support as Brexit voters turn to Farage’s ReformThe Tories have hit their joint lowest standing in the weekly tracker poll as Nigel Farage’s Reform takes its biggest share yet and the aftermath of Rishi Sunak’s D-Day gaffe takes effect.The prime minister apologised for skipping part of the commemorations to do an election interview for ITV last week but the first weekly tracker poll taken by Techne UK after the fiasco reveals the depth of public anger.Full report: Matt Mathers14 June 2024 00:011718319344A game of cat and mouseConservative Leader of the House of Commons Penny Mordaunt urged her rivals to keep “dogma” out of public services, such as the NHS, during ITV’s seven-way debate. “Most of the public don’t care what colour the cat is, they just want some mice caught,” she told her six rivals.“They (the public) want results and in my experience, listening to people who are actually doing these jobs – police officers who have reduced crime by half over the time we’ve been in office, healthcare professionals who are coming up with amazing initiatives in our hospitals and in our GP surgeries, teachers who are responsible now have 90% of our schools good or outstanding. Listen to the professionals in those services, keep political dogma out of it.”Plaid Cymru’s Rhun ap Iorwerth hit back: “I have to draw attention to the analogy with the cats and the mice here. What we’ve seen under the Conservatives and 14 years is the fat cats getting rich and getting the cream. I fear that with privatisation of the NHS, we’re going to see the same under Labour.”Conservative Leader of the House of Commons Penny Mordaunt urged her rivals to keep “dogma” out of public services, More

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    SNP’s Stephen Flynn grills Lib Dems on tuition fees during ITV debate

    SNP’s Westminster leader Stephen Flynn grilled Daisy Cooper, deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats, over their record on tuition fees during Thursday evening’s debate.As the discussion turned to the “crisis” in the UK’s education system, Mr Flynn pointed out that university fees in Scotland are far lower than in England, and asked Ms Cooper if she believes in “free tuition”.“On the point of tuition fees, we were punished for that, that is democracy,” she responded, referencing the 2015 election result that saw the end of the coalition between the Conservatives and Lib Dems. More

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    Nigel Farage draws laughter from audience as he insists he has ‘always told truth’

    Nigel Farage drew laughter from the audience as he insisted he has “always told the truth” in ITV’s debate on Thursday evening (13 June).The Reform UK leader claimed that other representatives in the debate – which included Penny Mordauntand Angela Rayner – had “lied to us repeatedly” over migration.“I’ve always told the truth,” he added, sparking laughs from the audience.ITV’s debate unfolded minutes after a new YouGov poll suggested Reform has overtaken the Conservatives for the first time ahead of next month’s general election.In the survey, Mr Farage’s party were put on 19 per cent, ahead of the Tories on 18 per cent. More

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    Sunak’s Tories hit Truss level of all-time low support as Brexit voters turn to Farage’s Reform

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe Tories have hit their joint lowest standing in the weekly tracker poll as Nigel Farage’s Reform takes its biggest share yet and the aftermath of Rishi Sunak’s D-Day gaffe takes effect.The prime minister apologised for skipping part of the commemorations to do an election interview for ITV last week but the first weekly tracker poll taken by Techne UK after the fiasco reveals the depth of public anger.According to Techne’s survey of 1,636 voters this week:The Tories have equalled Liz Truss’s unpopularity with just 19 per cent.They have hit their all-time low in the share of 2019 Tory voters with just 37 per cent.Reform under Nigel Farage has hit a new high on 16 per cent.For the first time ever more 2016 Leave voters support Reform (26 per cent) than the Tories (23 per cent).Apathy among voters has worsened in the past week with 22 per cent (up two) saying they will not vote.Reform leader Nigel Farage is now challenging the Tories for second place More