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Stride: Average Tory voter being aged 63 is ‘completely untenable’ situation

14 Aug 2024 5 minute read
Former Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride. Photo Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire

Tory Party leadership hopeful Mel Stride has said it is “completely untenable” that the average Conservative voter is 63 years old.

According to a YouGovpoll, the only age groups in which the Conservatives outperformed Labour in the General Election were in the 60-69, and 70 plus age groups.

Mr Stride is one of six candidates in the running to become the new leader of the Conservatives after former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak resigned in the wake of the party’s worst election result in its history.

Asked how he felt about a poll showing that three in five people in the UK do not care who the next Conservative leader is, Mr Stride told Times Radio: “The way I feel is, in a sense, not a huge amount of surprise.

“Because I think we have been a party that has been fighting itself and being introspective in a way that most people from the outside would have found pretty selfish.

“We did some great things when we were in government, absolutely great things, but there are areas where we failed to deliver.”

Unity

He added: “We’ve got to get a hearing with the British electorate, and we’re going to do that through unity, and we’re going to do that through a lot of listening and a lot of hard work and working out the answer to a lot of fundamental and difficult questions, including, for example, the fact that the average Conservative voter is aged 63, that is completely untenable.

“It is not something that you can solve by leaping on some magical ideological square. It is something you solve through deep, hard work over a sustained period of time.”

Mr Stride will compete against colleagues: James Cleverly, Kemi Badenoch, Tom Tugendhat, Mel Stride, and Priti Patel, all of whom are former government ministers, to become leader of the opposition.

The former work and pensions secretary criticised the Government’s approach to tackling those out of the labour market and not looking for work due to mental health issues, saying the new Government is “eerily silent” on the topic.

He said: “There is an issue, particularly actually around mental health, and particularly around younger people.

“Now that’s why, when I was the secretary of state and in government, I brought in fundamental reforms around something called the work capability assessment, which is the gateway into these benefits, to put the emphasis on helping people, particularly into employment, rather than consigning them to going on to benefits for the very long term.

“And what the OBR (Office for Budget Responsibility) said was that would reduce the numbers going on to those benefits by over 400,000 people. So there are things you can do, but it takes a bit of time, and it takes a lot of political will.

“My concern is that this Government said absolutely nothing about the reforms that I brought through, and if they do absolutely nothing, then the costs, for example, to the taxpayer, can continue to spiral ever upwards.

“Now, in the context of the kind of public finance pressures that we all know that we have, and this talk about tax rises and what’s coming up in the budget, it would be a complete dereliction of duty for this government to simply ignore these things, and at the moment, they are eerily silent on them.”

Absurd

Elsewhere, Mr Stride said X owner Elon Musk’s commentary on UK politics has been “absurd and deeply, deeply unhelpful”.

The owner of the social media site formerly known as Twitter has been criticising the Government’s response to riots, that has involved convictions for those found guilty of inciting violence online.

Mr Stride said Musk’s comments that the UK is on the brink of a civil war are “absurd and deeply, deeply unhelpful”.

He said: “I have concerns about X (formerly Twitter) generally, in terms of the fairly permissive approach to those that are able to further all sorts of views, including conspiracy theories, etc, on that platform.

“And I do think that one of the take aways from the very, very unfortunate incidents that have happened in recent days and weeks is that we do need to look afresh at social media in terms of policing content, in terms of consequence for those platform providers that allow some of these ideas to percolate, because they do have real world consequences, as we saw on our streets.”

Asked if he would stop using X, Mr Stride said: “Me, personally no, certainly not at the moment.

“I know some fellow colleagues across the House actually have been debating that, and I think some of them might have actually done that.

“In my case, I will stay on the site, but I do think we do need to have a long and careful, measured look at the way in which sites like X are feeding into issues like conspiracy theories, misinformation and violence on our streets.”


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Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
3 months ago

Mel Stride. Before the election, he was telling us about the great things the Tories did. After the election, he’s still saying it. He talks about ‘listening’ but he wasn’t listening on July 5th when he would have known that the people of the UK had told him in the most brutal and devastating way that they could hardly have wanted rid of his government any more. He also thinks we are mugs with short memories. He is trying to take credit for introducing a ‘new’ thing called work capability assessments. These were introduced by a predecessor over a decade… Read more »

Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago

His commentary on the radio this am was awful and showed a complete lack of understanding of real people issues with benefits. Rather than attack the very few that may be playing the system, he should listen to the majority of people that say how hard it is to get aid and make it easier. I don’t care that possibly a few may game the system, I care most, that is vast majority, that need it are hammered into the ground every turn they take. That was a Tory construct.

Which numpty is up next.

Last edited 3 months ago by Jeff
Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago
Reply to  Jeff

Spooky, just doing the sums, 63 is about 500 Liz Truss’s.

CapM
CapM
3 months ago

‘Tory Party leadership hopeful Mel Stride has said it is “completely untenable” that the average Conservative voter is 63 years old.’

Compared to age of the average Tory party member 63 years old represents the youth vote

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