
PMQs review: Natalie Elphicke’s defection to Labour steals the show
There may not be much overlap between her politics and Labour’s, but they do share a disdain for Rishi Sunak.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) is a constitutional convention whereby the prime minister answers questions from opposition MPs, held every Wednesday at noon while parliament is sitting. The practice of the prime minister taking questions at fixed times of the week was introduced by Harold Macmillan in 1961, on the recommendation of the House of Commons’ Procedure Committee, though the format has changed several times since then.
There may not be much overlap between her politics and Labour’s, but they do share a disdain for Rishi Sunak.
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ByKeir Starmer pins the Prime Minister into hopeless contortions over Conservative scandals.
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ByThe Prime Minister’s crude trans joke and his £1,000 Rwanda bet have exposed his lack of judgement.
ByThat a Conservative MP, George Freeman, has admitted he struggles to pay his mortgage makes that task even easier.
ByThe Prime Minister is no longer the master of his party – as Keir Starmer gleefully reminded him.
ByAs the Labour leader mercilessly exploited Tory divisions, Rishi Sunak was left politically helpless.
ByThe Labour leader relished mocking the Prime Minister’s erratic changes of strategy.
ByTory MPs are not grateful for the Prime Minister or optimistic about their prospects.
ByThe Labour leader has devised a potent line of attack on the government’s flagship asylum plan.
BySunak’s suggestion that Keir Starmer was “backing an EU country over Britain” by meeting the Greek Prime Minister was astonishingly…
ByThe Prime Minister said he supported “specific pauses” to allow humanitarian aid to reach Gaza.
ByThe Labour leader is seeking to draw attention to the humanitarian disaster unfolding in Gaza without reopening old divides.
ByThe Prime Minister’s attack on Starmer over his links to Jeremy Corbyn seemed desperate.
ByThe Labour leader co-opted the Tories’ “magic money tree” line of attack.
ByLabour’s deputy leader invoked past Tory failures as she channelled John Prescott’s 1996 PMQs appearance.
ByThe Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden did his best to copy the PM’s “blame Labour” routine.
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