This is a Birmingham news story, published by The New Statesman, that relates primarily to Kemi Badenoch news.
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weirdest Tory conferencesThe New Statesman
•66% Informative
As the champagne flowed down the gullets of the Tory activists gathered in Birmingham chipper, jolly, upbeat after the worst electoral defeat in their party’s history there was an incongruity with what had been in July .
The Tories seemed buoyed, animated by the prospect of opposition, something articulated by Kemi Badenoch in her conference address.
Part of it reflects the difference in the psychology of the two great parties: one a nervous wreck for much of its history, the other a largely unreflective election-winning machine.
Conservatives think voters are more statist and interventionist than they might ever like to admit.
There is cultural conservatism but there is little interest in the online rabbit holes, conspiracy theories and culture wars now normalised within conservative politics.
In their misunderstanding, a significant chunk of the Tory party now resembles the Labour left.
VR Score
66
Informative language
63
Neutral language
14
Article tone
informal
Language
English
Language complexity
49
Offensive language
possibly offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
3
Source diversity
3
Affiliate links
no affiliate links