The opening repartee was of decent quality, with Rayner, the Labour deputy leader, picking up on the prime minister's comment to the travelling press in Rwanda that he was looking to the 2030s. She asked Raab if the cabinet would support the prime minister for that long.
Raab said the cabinet wanted him to stay for longer than she wanted her leader to. She responded with a counterattack on the spur of the moment, not something we are used to seeing from that side of the Commons. She agreed that she didn't want Sir Keir Starmer to be leader of the opposition for much longer "what I want for my right hon friend is for him to be prime minister of this country".
She did something else that Starmer never does, which was repeatedly to demand a general election so that the people can say what they think of the government. That is a more effective line than Starmer's wheedling plea to Conservative backbenchers to depose the prime minister and replace him with a more popular one.
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