Highlights of Monday at the Tory Conference 2023

Highlights of Monday at the Tory Conference 2023

Quote of the day

If you tell the international⁤ investment⁤ community you are ⁢going to ⁤do ⁤something, you bloody well​ have to stick to your word.

Andy‍ Street, the Conservative mayor of the West Midlands, shows his annoyance at a fringe event as the prime minister prepares to confirm the scrapping of HS2’s northern leg.

Row of the⁤ day

Perhaps not the most fiery row, but one that highlights the ideological fissure between⁢ the centre⁤ and right of the party. Several moderates, including ⁤the security minister, Tom Tugendhat, and the​ international⁤ development minister, Andrew Mitchell, hit back at calls from the ​likes of Suella⁢ Braverman and Kemi Badenoch for the UK to leave the European convention on human rights (ECHR).

Tugendhat‌ was⁣ particularly scathing about the lack of answers from those who wanted to ⁢leave about how to “address the gaps that they create”,​ for example with Northern Ireland’s Good Friday agreement, which is dependent on the ECHR.

He ‌told Times Radio:

I’m just suggesting these are really big questions and don’t throw around words unless you can answer ‍the⁣ questions. And so​ what we need to do is make sure if ‌you’re⁢ looking at the future in a different​ way, that’s fine. Set‍ out the questions. Set ‌out the answers.

Tweet of the day

Adam‍ Bienkov from Byline Times finds a less-than-packed main hall for the speech of the culture secretary, ‌Lucy ⁣Frazer.

“It’s fantastic to be here,” the Culture Secretary tells a very sparse Conservative Party conference hall. Not many party members seem ‌to agree. ‍#CPC2023 pic.twitter.com/0YGMI7SgB3

— Adam Bienkov (@AdamBienkov) October 2, 2023Tuesday’s highlights

In a relatively low-key day on the main stage, the standouts are Michael Gove,​ the levelling up secretary, ‍just before lunch, and Braverman, the home secretary, to close the day – the former because he is one of the few remaining⁣ ministers who can give a decent⁣ speech; the latter because she is⁣ one ⁤of ⁤several ministers who can veer wildly from their brief, and even from government policy.

In policy terms, expect more ‌speculation, debate and anger – and maybe even a confirmed decision – on HS2. A party surely cannot spend an entire conference in a⁣ city waiting to hear if they ​are going to get ⁣a long-promised high speed rail line and not tell them. ‌Or maybe it can?

2023-10-02 11:23:55
Article from www.theguardian.com
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