
Houchen mulls anti-Labour pact with Reform
After the 4 July wipeout last year, Ben Houchen became the most senior Conservative left in public office across the UK. So it is intriguing then to hear the Tees Valley mayor make a series of remarks that are not entirely helpful to party leader, Kemi Badenoch. First, there were his comments last month to PoliticsHome in which Houchen warned that:
We do not live in a world of academia and think tanks. That's not what modern politics is about. It's a street fight. You've got to get out there. You've got to dig your nails in. You've got to dig your heels, and you've got to make progress one inch at a time. We're not doing enough to earn the respect from others, journalists, political parties or the public, because we're not doing that.
Whomever could he mean? Then, he told Politico this week that he wanted to see a 'coming together' of the two rightwing parties – despite Badenoch explicitly ruling out such a pact.

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The Herald Scotland
2 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Why it feels like there are more f-words in Shetland
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Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
Stride's vision of life: Thatcher, Branson and some gentle Tory porn
At an emergency meeting of the Militant Truss Army, held in a broom cupboard of the IEA, I broke the news about Mel Stride: 'Comrades, the shadow chancellor intends to denounce Lizonomics before the world press.' There were two votes for calling a general strike; one for assassination. Liz, inaudible till she took off the balaclava, suggested we cut taxes. 'That's your answer to everything,' spat Count Dracula, 'and it's what got us in this situation in the first place!' What situation? Out of power. As tragic to a Tory as being a fish out of water. In the end, the Truss faction got lucky: few people watched Mel's speech, and the hacks that did focused on his words about Kemi. 'She will get better through time,' he said, as if she were 18 again and manning the fryer at McDonald's. I always enjoy listening to the mellifluous Stride. Referencing the £120 million splashed on an HS2 bat shed, he said: 'It would've been better to have booked the bats into Claridge's and tucked them up in their little 'bat beds' with their 'bat butlers' to look after them.' Gentle Tory humour from a clever man who eyes an opportunity to define the Conservative Party contra Reform. Reform is populist: cut taxes, hand out goodies. The Tories seek to be popular but still recognisably conservative: balance the books, grow the private sector. For those who find Nigel a bit too much, or think his sums don't add up, you can instead have 'responsible radicalism' – a term Mel invented on the spot and offered less as a cri de coeur than a murmur of the heart. Asked to sum up his vision of life, he went back to the entrepreneurial Eighties and messin' about in boats: 'Thatcher and Branson going up the Thames,' he said, eyes blazing, 'with the sunlight playing on the water like an endless stream of opportunity.' Gentle Tory porn. Many Conservative MPs regard the good life as defined by money; their idol is Nigel Lawson. But most voters have no interest whatsoever in starting a business or storming the stock exchange: we want security, dignity, an easy job, long holidays and a loyal dog. Farage is winning because he's left Thatcher behind, crossing to the shallower end of conservatism, where we tread water in rubber rings, not so much swimming as floating on welfare. What's often forgotten about Liz's 2022 Budget is that it included a massive bung for home heating. Mel Stride, who surely does remember this, pledged: 'Never again will the Conservative Party undermine fiscal credibility by making promises we cannot afford!' So this is the pitch: Reform is too generous, we'll crack the whip. Politics has abandoned 'thoughtfulness', complained the shadow chancellor; it must give time to 'the careful consideration of arguments in order to establish the truth'. It's a nice idea, but while Kemi is biding her own time – working on getting better – we're anticipating Reform will overlap the Tories in the Hamilton by-election. Nigel is emerging as the real opposition. There was a crash: four figures in black descended from the skylight into the room, waving guns. 'This is an action by the Militant Truss Army,' cried a revolutionary in red heels, 'and we demand that you cut taxes!'


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
Badenoch ‘will get better', says Stride as Tories' polling woes continue
Kemi Badenoch 'will get better', one of her senior shadow ministers has said as the Conservative leader continues to languish in the polls. Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride insisted Mrs Badenoch is 'the person to lead us' as he answered questions following a speech on Thursday. He said: 'She will get better through time at the media, she will get better through time at the dispatch box at PMQs. 'Just as Margaret Thatcher when she became leader in 75 was often criticised for everything from her hair to the clothes she wore to the pitch of her voice to heaven knows what else – in the end she got it together and Kemi will do absolutely that.' Mrs Badenoch has faced a challenging time since taking over the Tory leadership last November. Her party continues to poll in third place behind Reform UK and Labour, with a YouGov poll published on Wednesday showing the Conservatives on 18%, just one point ahead of the Liberal Democrats. Mrs Badenoch's own favourability ratings have also fallen since she became party leader, reaching minus 27% according to a More in Common poll carried out last weekend. Meanwhile, former leadership contender Sir James Cleverly appeared to split from Mrs Badenoch on the environment in a speech on Wednesday evening, urging his party to reject climate change 'luddites' on the right who believe 'the way things are now is just fine'. The Conservative leader has described herself as a 'net zero sceptic' and launched her party's policy renewal process in March by arguing it is 'impossible' to reach net zero by 2050. In his remarks on Thursday, Sir Mel said Mrs Badenoch is 'leading a shadow cabinet that is united'. He added: 'Our party has not been united in that way for a very long time, and she is going to drive through the process – with me and others – so that we come to the right conclusion.' Sir Mel's remarks followed a speech in which he sought to distance the Conservatives from Lis Truss's mini-budget, saying the party needs to show 'contrition' to restore its economic credibility. In a furious response, Ms Truss accused Sir Mel of having 'kowtowed to the failed Treasury orthodoxy' and being 'set on undermining my plan for growth'. Calling for a 'bold rewiring' of the economy, Sir Mel argued both Conservative and Labour governments in recent decades had failed to secure economic growth and improve living standards. He went on to attack Labour and Reform UK, saying Chancellor Rachel Reeves is 'fiddling the figures' and basing all her spending on borrowing, while claiming Nigel Farage's economic plan 'doubles down on the 'magic money tree' we thought had been banished with Jeremy Corbyn'. In response, Labour accused Sir Mel of failing to properly apologise for the mini-budget. A party spokesman said: 'Kemi Badenoch has spent the last six months making billions of pounds of unfunded spending commitments and promoting Liz Truss's disastrous top team. 'The Tories inflicted mortgage misery and sky-high bills on working people. Their weasel words can't change that fact, and their unfunded plans show they will do it all over again. They haven't changed.'