After the fawning media coverage of Young Dave’s jolly good
speech on the EU, the Tories must have been expecting a positive response. After
all, the papers with the biggest circulations, such as the Sun and Daily Mail, had
been unequivocally supportive. The Maily
Telegraph had been there with them, barring Peter Oborne being
the obligatory prophet of doom.
Sadly, the Great British Public do not seem to have
appreciated the effort that had been put into Cameron’s speech, and the yet
greater effort into portraying it as the product of all that was best of
Winshton, Margaret Thatcher, and for the preposterously pompous Simon Heffer,
Enoch Powell. The pollsters today bring the first post-speech survey. And the
news is dire.
YouGov’s
daily poll, the latest sample taken entirely after the Cameron speech,
shows a small improvement in Tory numbers, apparently at the expense of UKIP,
but Labour is holding steady on 43%, a whole 10% in front. That would translate
at a General Election into an overall majority for Mil The Younger of 96 seats.
The Tories are doing no better than they
were this time last week.
Worse news was brought by Mike Smithson at Political Betting this morning (relaying
poll results from Populus), as it was also revealed that just 13% of voters
said that Young Dave’s intervention would make them more likely to vote Tory,
while a larger 16% said it would make them less
likely to. A whopping 71% of respondents didn’t care, and thus a moderately
sized hint.
Spot the howler in the Labour numbers
So the message from the public is, as ever, that they don’t see the EU as such a big deal. When Cameron proclaims “I will settle the Europe question with an EU referendum”, Liam Fox drools over the PM offering voters a “real choice”, and a sundry craphead at the Express cobbles together “Twenty reasons to cheer leaving the EU”, the reaction out there on the streets is “meh”.
What voters put at the top of their political shopping list
is not the EU, but the domestic economy. And the news on that front today is
equally grim. Following on the mildly inconvenient news that Channel
4’s Fact Check had rated Young
Dave’s claim of “We’re paying down
Britain’s debts” as “Fiction”,
today has brought the latest GDP figures, which show a 0.3% contraction
and a potential triple dip recession.
So those voters seeing the PM, along with neighbour the Rt
Hon Gideon George Oliver Osborne, heir to the Seventeenth Baronet, and
occasional London Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, loudly
enjoying their visit to a Davos pizza restaurant where the
average cover price was around £45 (wine extra – a lot extra), might not be
so impressed with all the hot air expended over the EU.
Cameron should quit
screwing around with PR stunts and start doing his job.
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