How the Tories, Labour and Lib Dems have turned conference season into the Farage show

WHen Nigel Farage launched the party conference season for reform in Birmingham and joked the party members: “Not all of me.”
“We are not a single group, we are a complete team ,, and pointed out a line of 11 reforms with the names of leading party members. When it came to buying one of these shirts, the only person was behind Farage’s name.
However, by pushing the farage pushing reform to new summits in the polls, the traditional main political parties took all of them to the heart and decided that their conferences should be related to them.
For a sparse Torah Conference, which attracts little attention in Manchester, it is understood that Kemi Badenoch decides to make a personal reform tribute movement by naming Farage’s policies.
Tories – if most people come to power in doubt – now the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) abandons climate change policies and apparently continues 500 people (150,000 a year) a day. Although he claimed that his party has brought a plan for these policies, unlike Farage, at the first conference address.
Acting to the right is undoubtedly a reform response that explains similar policies and sees the flaws of TORY voters and even existing and existing and existing and existing deputies.
However, Badenoch is not alone than just a conference on Farage.
Keir Starmer decided to hold the entire Workers’ Conference on Farage and Reform. He and all the cabinet ministers focused on something and something by calling Farage and his crew as immoral. Paint them as a real enemy.
In some respects, this is a bit surprising, considering that the reform is a party fighting to protect five deputies. However, surveys (and the continuous flow of the victories of the Council) do not lie.
And Lib Demit took action. In his Keynote conference speech, Lib Dem De Davey Farage mentioned Lib Dem Independent at least 30 times. Considering that Lib DEMS has 72 seats, they are also looking at data and panic.
However, the problem with this strategy is that negative attacks often convince those who do not like reform. They also claim that everyone who votes reform is immoral or worse.
And by filling the area with attacks, there are little positive about what they are doing. In Tories’s case, at least they are trying to be positive, but they seem to be doing pale imitations of reform policies. Farage will deport 600,000 per year and Badenoch 150,000.
However, the results are inevitable. Continuous conversation about Farage and Reform is basically advertising for him and his party.
At the workers’ conference, the first survey after the reform attack told his own story. Opinium, 34 percent in two points, workers 13 points behind, 21 percent fell.




