There are reasons why it was much lower than Labour’s – perhaps even why it was lower than last time round. None the less, CCHQ needs to take a long hard look at it.
The Richmond Park MP won over 70 per cent of the vote.
The view of our Party member readers is settled.
Plus our usual monthly questions – including a final shot at who the Conservative candidate should be for next year’s London Mayoral election.
If you haven’t yet received your vote, there is still time and opportunity to secure it.
He is ready on day one to be a great Mayor of London.
I want a winner, but I also want a winner who will be the best possible Mayor.
As voting opens, the contenders give their last pitch for the nomination.
Name recognition plus appeal to floating voters leave this authentic individualist Tory in a position to beat a Labour machine politician next May.
From Cabinet Ministers to Conservative Associations, the troubled IT system is losing people’s confidence.
He is in no sense an extremist – far from it. But his candidacy is more likely to divide London’s voters along confessional lines than Jowell’s would have been.
The troubled VoteSource database strikes again as CCHQ asks activists to manually check membership lists.
A clear majority in each case simply don’t have an opinion. We run this report today simply because it marries up with Mark Wallace’s exclusive above.
Boff was, well, Boff. Greenhalgh never really sparked. And Goldsmith was, frankly, all over the place.
For those who missed the livestream last night, we present the full recording of the debate.