47 per cent also backed the hike in employers’ national insurance as the Labour policy they would most like to see reversed.
22.1 per cent named Labour, 6.6 per cent named the Liberal Democrats, and none of our panellists answered with the Greens.
On a comedown from last month’s burst of optimism, the share for a Conservative majority is down to 24 per cent, its lowest level since August.
For Starmer to be as radical as he suggests he will require a personality transplant.
In the spirit of Mary I, shall ‘Cardiff’ one day be found lying in her heart? Without stalling Farage’s advance, Tory MPs will start to panic.
He has led the Conservatives in the Principality for most of the last thirteen years, with a break between 2018 and 2021.
If the world’s richest man is making plans for Nigel, both Starmer and Badenoch should be worried.
If nothing else, we did demonstrate, in our last few months in office, that reversing the immigration ratchet is not impossible.
Raised in a Nigeria sliding into chaos, Badenoch views this as a country with fragile virtues – nationhood, neighbourliness, law and order – sacrificing them to progressive dogma.
Our new leader should learn from her former boss Fraser Nelson and look to Sweden’s example of reversing net migration.
Badenoch would be mad not to bind the ertstwhile hero of Clarkson’s Farm to the Tories in any way possible.
There is no point in trying to extricate ourselves from being Washington’s vassal only to become Beijing’s. Net zero at all costs is a recipe for national humiliation.
The obvious question: how would you have voted? A clear majority would have picked Trump, with 60.5 per cent backing the 45th President. Only 24.1 per cent opted for Kamala Harris.
The full list has been released ahead of the first meeting of the Shadow Cabinet
Is this a Shadow Cabinet to break from the last fourteen years, that shows voters we understand why we loathed? Or does it show just how much loyalty matters to Badenoch?