Sunday, October 6, 2024

Tory MPs may have to *act* Cleverly to *stop* Cleverly

What I'm about to say will to some extent contradict my previous post, because looking at the latest Tory members' poll from ConHome, I really do struggle to see why Robert Jenrick is still favourite to win the leadership contest.  (And as of this moment he is still favourite - I've just checked.)

There's going to be a head-to-head members' ballot between just two candidates, and regardless of whether he is up against Kemi Badenoch or James Cleverly, the poll shows Jenrick losing by a wide margin.

Jenrick v Badenoch

Kemi Badenoch 53%
Robert Jenrick 33%

Jenrick v Cleverly

James Cleverly 54%
Robert Jenrick 36%

The only candidate Jenrick would beat in a head-to-head is Tom Tugendhat, which is no use to him because Tugendhat is plainly not going to be his opponent.  So precisely how is Jenrick supposed to emerge from this process as leader?  In spite of what the betting odds say, I don't think he can, unless the poll is completely wrong.

The poll does keep alive the possibility of James Cleverly being stopped, though, because Badenoch would narrowly beat him in a head-to-head - 

Badenoch v Cleverly:

Kemi Badenoch 48%
James Cleverly 42%

So logically what may now happen is that hard-right MPs might ditch Jenrick in favour of Badenoch in the remaining ballots to engineer a Badenoch v Cleverly run-off, which appears to be the only way Cleverly might yet lose.

Arguably Cleverly should currently be listed as favourite, with Badenoch as second favourite and Jenrick a distant third.

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6 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. As James said in the last post: this may well be picking the next British prime minister. Starmer's doing miserably.

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  2. No relevance to Scotland

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    Replies
    1. Once we're independent, maybe. But we're not. The Tories will be governing us with the heel of their shoes again soon enough. England's will.

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  3. As for James's actual point, I just asked AI…

    Based on the search results provided, there appears to be a discrepancy between Robert Jenrick's position as the betting favorite and his performance in recent polls of Conservative Party members.



    Conclusion
    The discrepancy between betting odds and member polls highlights the complexity of the leadership race. Betting markets may be placing more weight on Jenrick's performance among MPs, while recent polls suggest that party members currently prefer other candidates. As the contest progresses and the field narrows, it's possible that betting odds will adjust to reflect changing member preferences more closely.


    Essentially, the betting is being daft and the smart money's against Jenrick? Seems odd. We're always told that gamblers are better at this stuff than pollsters, but my money's certainly not on that!

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  4. Maybe punters don't believe the poll. We're always told that Tory members are extremely xenophobic centenarians so I don't understand why they'd reject the child-immigrant-torturing Jenrick in favour of the relatively moderate Cleverly, even if the latter does enjoy joking about sexually assaulting his wife

    ReplyDelete