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Boris Johnson's just given his first speech
as Conservative party leader to a Conservative party
conference, quite a strange Conservative party conference
because everyone knows that we're
in the middle of events that are going to play out elsewhere.
It's that sense of anticipation.
Are we going for an election?
Are we going to get a Brexit deal?
Well, I want you to know conference
and I have kept my ace up my sleeve.
My mother voted Leave.
But on the other hand, this has also
been quite a unified and upbeat conference.
There was real delight as Boris Johnson walked into the hall.
They were chanting, Boris, Boris.
And they've been waiting for this moment
for quite a long time.
He's the itch the Conservative party's
been waiting to scratch.
And he related really well to the party conference.
In terms of the speech, there's not a lot of real content
there, but what I think was significant
was an attempt to paint a little bit more upbeat, a little bit
more can-do, a more optimistic picture than perhaps
the Conservatives have been messaging
for the last few weeks, where there's been a lot of anger.
There's been a lot of intemperate language.
This is not an anti-European country.
We are European.
We love Europe.
I love Europe, anyway.
I love it.
But after 45 years of really dramatic constitutional change
in our relationships, we must have a new relationship
with the EU, a positive and confident partnership.
And we can do it.
And today, in Brussels, we are tabling
what I believe are constructive and reasonable proposals, which
provide a compromise for both sides.
He tried in the speech to say, look,
there is a great place just beyond the mountains.
Once Brexit is done, we can be a more unified, more can-do, more
prosperous, more happy country.
It was also interesting that in some moments
he reached out a little bit to those
on the other side of the argument, the Remain side.
He had a passage about London, where
he talked about what a wonderful city it was.
That's not been the messaging incoming
from the Conservative party of late,
though he also counterbalanced it with talk
about how the rest of the country
had to be given the help to catch up with London
in a big pitch for the regions.
Let's get Brexit done by October the 31 because we have to get
on and deliver on the priorities of the people,
to answer the cry of those 17.4m who voted for Brexit because it
is only by delivering Brexit that we can address that
feeling in so many parts of the country that they'd been left
behind, ignored.
He talked about how there was nothing unpatriotic
about being a Remainer.
You didn't have to doubt their belief,
but we have to now get on and get Brexit done.
That was the fundamental thing.
We had to get on with it.
And let's get Brexit done for those millions
who may have voted Remain but who are
first and foremost Democrats.
The fundamental point is that today he
and his government put in what they said
is their last big offer to the European Union.
The papers have gone to Brussels.
They know that they won't get it accepted straightaway.
They're waiting for Brussels to bite and get into negotiations.
So we have this real sense that although this
was a pretty successful speech and a fairly successful
conference, that the determining factors
in the Conservative party's future are elsewhere.
The fate of this government, this prime minister,
and obviously this country is not
going to be settled here in the Conservative party conference.
It's probably not even going to be settled in Westminster.
It's being settled in Brussels.
And everybody leaving Manchester may
leave with a bit of a spring in their step.
But quite quickly, they're going to realise that the events that
the events that determine their party and the country's fate
are taking place elsewhere and that we've got to wait to see
how they play out.