Two Harrogate district MPs look to have backed the right candidate with the announcement of the next Prime Minister set to be made later today.
Rishi Sunak is on course to win the Conservative leadership contest after Boris Johnson withdrew from the race last night.
Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, and Julian Smith, Skipton and Ripon MP, are among the 155 MPs who have declared their support for the former chancellor.
Penny Mordaunt, who is also running for the leadership, currently has the support of 25 MPs.
Writing on his Community News website, Mr Jones said on Friday:
“I’m backing Rishi because he has the experience, ability and energy to tackle the problems facing our country.
“He instinctively reaches for the right solutions and now, more than ever, we need someone who will bring those qualities to our national politics. He has demonstrated proven, economic judgement in unprecedented times.”
Nigel Adams, Selby and Ainsty MP which includes rural Harrogate, had backed Johnson for the leadership before the former Prime Minister withdrew from the race.
General Election calls
It comes as opposition parties, including Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, have called for a General Election to be held.
The Stray Ferret asked the Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative party what it made of the current situation in Parliament and whether it supported the suggestion of an election being held.
A spokesperson for the local party said:
“Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative Association is here to serve its members who hold a wide range of views and opinions.
“We strongly support democracy and believe general elections should take place when called through the appropriate channels.
“It is our understanding that the election timetable is already published unless the government of the day makes alternative arrangements.”
Read more:
- Consultation launched over £540m North Yorkshire devolution deal
- Fears for Harrogate hospitality after series of closures
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP: ‘I’m ready for Rishi’
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has said he is backing Rishi Sunak to be the next Prime Minster.
The odds on Richmond MP Mr Sunak winning shortened overnight to 4/7, according to betting site Oddschecker.
Boris Johnson has slipped slightly to 79/40 and Penny Mordaunt remains the outsider at 16/1.
Mr Jones did not respond to questions from the Stray Ferret about who he was supporting but told his Community News website:
“I’m backing Rishi because he has the experience, ability and energy to tackle the problems facing our country.
“He instinctively reaches for the right solutions and now, more than ever, we need someone who will bring those qualities to our national politics. He has demonstrated proven, economic judgement in unprecedented times.
“I admired how he dealt with the Herculean challenges which faced the country when covid hit. He worked at pace to save businesses and jobs and to provide the cash our NHS needed to get us through the pandemic.
“This vote is about the future. That future needs energy and ability at the top of our politics. It needs someone who can assemble and lead a broad-based team. For me, that person is Rishi Sunak.”
Read more:
- Ripon MP backs Sunak in race to be Prime Minister
- Fears for Harrogate hospitality after series of closures
Mr Jones joins fellow local Conservative MP Julian Smith, who represents Skipton and Ripon, in backing the former Chancellor.
However, Selby and Ainsty MP Nigel Adams has thrown his weight behind Mr Johnson, who he served as a Cabinet Office minister.
Mr Adams has said Mr Johnson is the only candidate with a mandate to be Prime Minister and if anyone else is elected it will increase the likelihood of an early general election.
Ripon MP backs Sunak in race to be Prime Minister
Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith has today backed Rishi Sunak in the race to become the next Prime Minister.
Mr Smith is the first local MP to declare his support for a candidate to succeed Liz Truss, which could be resolved as soon as Monday.
In a tweet this afternoon, Mr Smith said Mr Sunak would “restore financial credibility” and unite the party.
https://twitter.com/JulianSmithUK/status/1583457402258567170
According to betting site Oddschecker, Mr Sunak remains the favourite to be the next PM at 4/5. But Boris Johnson’s odds have been slashed dramatically to 32/21 while Penny Mordaunt is the outsider at 9-1.
Andrew Jones, MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough and Nigel Adams, MP for Selby and Ainsty, have yet to comment publicly on their choices.
Mr Jones and Mr Smith supported Sunak in his failed summer bid against Liz Truss.
Adams was one of Johnson’s staunchest allies, and was made a Cabinet Office minister in his government. But a number of moderate Conservatives have threatened to resign the whip if Johnson wins.
Mr Jones and Mr Smith both called for Mr Johnson’s resignation while he was still in office.
Read more:
- Investment zones ‘won’t harm environment’, claims Andrew Jones MP
- Ripon MP Julian Smith says ‘huge tax cut’ is ‘wrong’
Mr Jones said “lawmakers cannot be lawbreakers” and “we have come to the end of the road with this Prime Minister” and urged him to “move aside for the good of the country and our politics”.
Mr Smith urged Mr Johnson to “take the lead in a responsible transition to ensure stable government for our country”.
It seems the election of Sunak, who represents Richmond in North Yorkshire, would go down well with many local Conservatives, who may see added value in having a Prime Ministerial constituency on their doorstep.
Carl Les, the Conservative leader of North Yorkshire County Council, also declared his support for Mr Sunak during his leadership battle with Ms Truss.
So although a Johnson win might prove popular with Mr Adams, it could raise some difficult questions for those MPs, such as Mr Jones and Mr Smith, who just three months ago were calling on him to quit.
Liz Truss resignation: Harrogate district reaction
Liz Truss resigned as Prime Minister today after just 44 days in office.
See how the Harrogate district reacted to the news this afternoon.
5.01pm – Harrogate and Knaresborough Lib Dems still searching for candidate
The lengthy process to find a prospective parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough remains ongoing.
The local party called today for an election but as yet it doesn’t have anyone to take on Conservative Andrew Jones.
It said in June it had started the process but four months on the matter remains unresolved.
David Goode, chair of the Harrogate and Knaresborough Lib Dems, said
“We are moving at pace to select a parliamentary candidate. It is a rigorous process for a target seat but be in no doubt we are planning to fight Harrogate and Knaresborough to win at the next election, whenever that maybe. We need a MP who will work for us, not just trot along behind the government.”
Monika Slater, a Lib Dem who represents Bilton Grange and New Park on North Yorkshire County Council, said
“Boris Johnson failed our country and Liz Truss trashed our economy.
“People in Harrogate and Knaresborough deserve better than this incompetent and chaotic government, which has sent mortgages spiralling while our NHS services are stretched to breaking point.
“The Conservative party have proven time and time again they are not fit to lead our great country.
“This country needs a general election and Andrew Jones and other Conservative MP’s cannot prop up more chaotic Governments.
“At the next election people across Harrogate and Knaresborough will be backing the Liberal Democrats to get a fair deal on the NHS and the cost of living instead of more Conservative chaos.”
4.35pm – Andrew Jones MP: Truss departure ‘inevitable’
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has published a statement on his Community News website.
Mr Jones said:
“As difficult as today is for her it has, I’m afraid, been inevitable and it is the national interest that matters.
“It was an enormous and unforced error to bring forward the mini-Budget without an assessment by the Office of Budget Responsibility and an accompanying statement on departmental spending.
“It was a mistake for her to surround herself with just supporters and not form a broader-based team.
“Ms Truss began to undo the damage with the appointment of Jeremy Hunt as Chancellor who jettisoned a lot of the mistakes she had made, calmed the markets and emphasised the need for stability.
“But the personal damage to her was done and too severe for her to have any hope of recovery. It has felt in parliament that over the last week her authority had been seeping away. That is why she had to go.”
Mr Jones, who said there was “plenty to be positive about here in Harrogate and Knaresborough” when the government announced its mini-budget last month, did not reveal who he supports as a successor.
But he said whoever it is “needs to bring on board all the talents available to them, adding:
“Our politics and our country need a period of calm stability and I look forward, at last, to that being delivered.”
4.17pm – Could North Yorkshire be home to the Prime Minister by next Friday?
Richmond MP Rishi Sunak is the clear bookies’ favourite to succeed Liz Truss as Prime Minister. Oddschecker currently has him at 10/11, with Penny Mordaunt second favourite at 11-4. But the odds against third favourite Boris Johnson have been slashed to 9-2.
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones and Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith both supported Mr Sunak in the leadership contest against Liz Truss.
3.50pm – Nigel Adams ‘not doing any media at the moment’
Minutes after posting that none of the local Conservative MPs had replied to us, one of them responded. But it isn’t exactly hold-the-front-page stuff.
Selby and Ainsty MP Nigel Adams’ senior parliamentary assistant emailed to say:
“Nigel is not doing any media at the moment.”
3.41pm – Silence from Harrogate district MPs
We asked the three Conservative MPs whose constituencies include parts of the Harrogate district whether Liz Truss was right to resign and who they supported to be her successor.
We asked Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith and Selby and Ainsty MP Nigel Adams to reply by 3.30pm today. So far none has replied.
3.06pm – Are local opposition parties ready to fight an election?
Local Liberal Democrats and Harrogate supporters have been quick to call for an election but would they be ready to fight one?
Currently only the Green Party has a prospective parliamentary candidate to take on Andrew Jones in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
We have asked the Liberal Democrats and Labour for details of their search to find PPCs and will report their responses.
2.50pm – Yorkshire Party calls for end to ‘London-centric’ politics
The Yorkshire Party says ‘Yorkshire has been left to fend for itself’.
https://twitter.com/Yorkshire_Party/status/1582825610136588288
2.33pm – Tories ‘have lost mandate to govern,’ says Green PPC.
Paul Ko Ferrigno, the prospective parliamentary candidate for the Green Party in Harrogate and Knaresborough, has added his voice to calls for an election. He said:
“The Conservatives are unable to govern themselves and have lost any mandate to govern the country.
“People are worried about the cost of fuel and the cost of energy and rising mortgage rates and rising inflation and their dwindling quality of life.
“We don’t need another week of Tory navel gazing, we need a General Election and a government that puts people first.”
2.11pm – Ripon-based Lib Dem leader in House of Lords calls for election
Dick Newby, the Liberal Democrat peer and party leader in the House of Lords, has tweeted for an election.
The Conservatives no longer have any shred of credibility left. Their MPs should do their patriotic duty and call a general election. https://t.co/i7iTru5ReT
— Dick Newby (@RichardNewby3) October 20, 2022
2.05pm – Harrogate Labour campaigner calls for election
Chris Watt, local Harrogate Labour party campaigner, has also called for an election.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“The Tory government are a shambles. They’ve trashed the economy and presided over 12 years of stagnation.
“They can keep changing their leader but we need a change of government.
“The choice is clear: more of this incompetent Tory government, which the MP here has consistently supported. Or a Labour Government led by Keir Starmer. We need a General Election now so the people can decide.”
He has also been tweeting:
The Tories can keep changing leader but we need a change of Government and a General Election now. @UKLabour stands ready to serve.
BBC News – Liz Truss resigns as prime minister after Tory revolthttps://t.co/CyaXUp9Lky
— Chris Watt (@ChrisWatt4) October 20, 2022
2pm – Call from Liberal Democrats for General Election
Skipton and Ripon Liberal Democrats have called for a General Election following the departure of Liz Truss.
https://twitter.com/SkiptonRiponLD/status/1583077632979062784?s=20&t=yOrqpSznmcwOkHCPUYvvNA
1.55pm – Harrogate politicians reaction
Following the announcement of the resignation of Liz Truss, the Stray Ferret has contacted the Harrogate district’s three Conservative MPs for their reaction.
We have also contacted opposition parties for their thoughts on this afternoon’s news.
Harrogate district business groups call for more support after new PM’s energy announcementA business organisation in Harrogate has called for more certainty after the new Prime Minister announced support for them in the face of rising energy bills.
While a clear package has been put in place for households, limiting typical household bills to £2,500 per year for two years, Liz Truss has said “equivalent support” for business will last for six months.
But local businesses have called for further measures and more long-term reassurance that they will be protected from future energy price hikes.
David Simister, chief executive of Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce, said:
“I welcome the fact the Prime Minister has included businesses in her support package, but for some it will be too little too late, and unlike households it’s just for six months. She could also have reduced VAT on energy bills, but didn’t.
“Businesses have had it incredibly tough for more than two years, and it isn’t going to get any easier. Surging energy costs are just one of the pressures facing businesses.
“When Ms Truss recently came to Harrogate, members of Independent Harrogate challenged her about business rates. Her response was that she would review them. This she needs to do urgently, along with looking at VAT, fuel duty, National Insurance and Corporation Tax.”
Mr Simister’s views were echoed by Ripon BID, whose manager Lilla Bathurst said:
“Whilst any support for businesses is welcomed, we feel that a six month energy price cap does not go nearly far enough to support businesses that have weathered the last very difficult two years.
“The majority of businesses in the BID area simply do not have the reserves to ride out any further cost pressures. We very much urge the government to announce further meaningful and targeted business support in the next few days.”
Read more:
- Harrogate district businesses urge new PM to offer urgent support
- Dacre Banks pub gives warning as it faces £65,000 energy bill
Harrogate district MPs welcome new PM as rumours spread over cabinet appointments
MPs in the Harrogate district have given their thoughts on the announcement of Liz Truss as the leader of the Conservative party.
As her confirmation as Prime Minister is set to take place today, Harrogate and Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones has welcomed her and offered his support.
He said:
“Being Prime Minister is a great responsibility and I offer Ms Truss my full support in her new role. I backed Rishi Sunak and he fought a very credible campaign.
“I am though, first and foremost, a democrat and when your choice doesn’t win you need to accept that and row in behind the winner. We are fortunate to have a breadth of talent in the government which provided us with an excellent field of candidates from which to choose any of whom would have been up to the job.
“Congratulations to Ms Truss on her success.”
Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon, posted his congratulations on Twitter.
Both he and Mr Jones highlighted the energy crisis and pressure on businesses as among the issues requiring the most urgent attention from the new Prime Minister and her cabinet, expected to be announced soon after her official confirmation in the role from the Queen at Balmoral this afternoon.
Read more:
- Nigel Adams MP resigns from cabinet
- Ripon MP warned councils are facing ‘enormous’ costs as inflation rises
It is not yet known whether any of the district’s MPs will be selected by Ms Truss for roles in government.
There has been some support for Mr Smith to be returned to his previous position as Northern Ireland Secretary: a mural in Belfast called for his reinstatement yesterday.
However, Mr Smith’s light-hearted response on Twitter suggests he is not expecting a call any time soon.
Big thanks to Larry for the shout out, but tbh it's not feline likely… https://t.co/ow1s2wEDr1
— Julian Smith MP (@JulianSmithUK) September 5, 2022
Meanwhile, Nigel Adams, MP for Selby and Ainsty, has announced his resignation as minister without portfolio, a position he held under Boris Johnson as one of the outgoing PM’s closes allies.
Posting on Twitter in response to Mr Adams’ resignation letter, Mr Smith said:
Rishi Sunak to court Conservatives in Harrogate tomorrow“Typically punchy letter from [Nigel Adams] who is a case study in backing a political horse early, sticking with it through thick and thin & showing total loyalty and support. Every PM needs a Nigel.”
Rishi Sunak will visit Harrogate tomorrow to court Conservative Party members as he attempts to boost his flagging hopes of becoming the next Prime Minister, the Stray Ferret understands.
The former Chancellor is expected to be in Harrogate at around 3pm to meet members, who have been voting for either Foreign Secretary Liz Truss or Mr Sunak to be the next Tory leader and PM.
Mr Sunak was the most popular choice among MPs, but among members, polling has put him consistently behind Ms Truss.
Bookmaker William Hill has odds of 1/16 for Ms Truss to be the winner with Mr Sunak trailing way behind on 17/2.
A lengthy campaign has seen two rivals tour the country in July and August.
Liz Truss met members in Harrogate on August 9, attending a house on the Duchy estate believed to be owned by Harrogate Borough Council deputy leader Graham Swift.

Liz Truss arrives at Bettys in Harrogate this month.
It will be the second visit to the Harrogate district for Mr Sunak, who spoke to party members in Masham earlier in the campaign.
The winner will be announced by September 5.
Read more:
The Richmond MP has the backing of both Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones and Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith.
In an article on his website, Community News, Mr Jones described why he is backing the former chancellor. He wrote:
Liz Truss set to speak to Conservatives in Harrogate tomorrow“The country needs someone who is consistent and transparent to reinvigorate trust in politics.”
Conservative leadership candidate Liz Truss will visit Harrogate tomorrow as she continues to tout for votes from the party’s membership.
The foreign secretary will speak to local members at an undisclosed venue at lunchtime in what is being described by organisers as “an informal gathering in a central Harrogate location”.
Tickets have been sold in advance by Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative Party, with even those booked to attend not being told the location of the event until tomorrow morning. Organisers have cited “security reasons” for the secrecy.
Last month, Ms Truss’s opponent, Rishi Sunak, spoke to party members at an event at the Black Sheep Brewery in Masham.
Attendees included Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon, who has declared his support for Mr Sunak. Some of those present told the Stray Ferret there was a “warm” reception for the candidate, and that many present were already predisposed to him.
Great to welcome @RishiSunak to a packed @BlackSheepBeer in #masham today. Excellent feedback from @conservatives members across North Yorkshire #Ready4Rishi pic.twitter.com/aCY9s3gZy2
— Julian Smith MP (@JulianSmithUK) July 24, 2022
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has also given his backing to the former chancellor.
Nigel Adams, whose Selby and Ainsty constituency covers the Harrogate district’s southern and eastern rural areas, has not declared his allegiance. A close ally of outgoing Prime Minister Boris Johnson, he has said he will stand down at the next election.
Ms Truss and Mr Sunak are the final two left in a long-running race to lead the party and become the next Prime Minister.
Ballot papers have now been issued to party members, with the winner of the contest set to be announced on Monday, September 5.
Read more:
- Rishi Sunak ‘warmly received’ in Masham
- Second Harrogate district MP declares support in Conservative leadership battle
- Chancellor Rishi Sunak visits Harrogate
Strayside Sunday: Is the £540m Devolution Deal good enough?
Strayside Sunday is our political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
This week my former colleague Greg Clark, then Director of Policy for the Conservatives, now Secretary of State for the tongue-twisting Levelling Up, Communities and Local Government signed-off and handed down North Yorkshire & York’s much anticipated devolution settlement. The 32-page document awarded the area £540m over the next 30 years, along with devolved powers to help the region develop the skills, housing, and transport infrastructure it needs. Whether this represents, as the government claims, “a once-in-a-generation chance to help tackle regional inequalities by not only reducing the North South divide nationally, but also helping to resolve economic differences that are being felt between urban and rural area,” remains to be seen.
What we do know is that the money comes with the promise that we’ll get a Combined Authority, likely next year, with an elected Mayor to follow in 2024. This must be a good thing, with the shining examples of Tees Valley’s Ben Houchen and the West Midland’s Andy Street demonstrating the positive leadership possibilities an elected Mayor can bring. Both have used the special powers of the office to create special purpose Mayoral Development Corporations to buy land and assets to drive local economic regeneration and employment, to great effect. Houchen famously returned Teeside Airport to public ownership and, just this week, Street announced Birmingham as the new home for a large portion of the BBC’s production capabilities, testament to investments made in vital property infrastructure. Tracy Brabin, West Yorkshire’s elected Mayor, still relatively new in post, is yet to find her feet.
Whether or not North Yorkshire’s Mayor is a success will rest on strength of personality and imagination. Will they have the vision, communication skills and drive to push the limits of their newfound powers and make the most of them? Let’s hope so. They’ll need to be more persuasive than North Yorkshire Council’s representatives who made the bid for devolution. Last week’s settlement was significantly less than the “ask”. £750m over 25 years had been requested, versus the £540m over 30 years received. Net, the new Mayor will have £18m per year to spend on their agenda, rather than the £25m per year hoped for. The bid also hoped for £47m to redevelop the much-maligned Harrogate Convention Centre. Much to Harrogate Borough Council Leader Richard Cooper’s disappointment this was turned down flat – with Westminster civil servants giving a “very strong steer” it would not be funded and should not be part of the devolution settlement. The money for that will now have to be found from other means, with an application to Boris Johnson’s Levelling Up Fund in the works. The Convention Centre’s future remains uncertain, not least because with the coming change in Conservative Party leadership there is no guarantee that existing spending commitments will hold.
And that’s part of the problem here. £540m sounds like a big sum but, in truth we can’t be certain it represents new money. We have little idea how it fits with the existing local government grant and public spending commitments. What we do know is that it seems certain that tax cuts will be on the government’s agenda following the change of Prime Minister. That, plus the most ominous macro-economic climate in a generation (recession, soaring inflation and rising interest rates) means that coming downward pressure on public spending seems locked in. Whoever becomes Mayor of North Yorkshire and York will have their work cut out for them.
The same of course is true for the new Prime Minister. It now seems likely (if polls are to be believed) that Liz Truss will win comfortably the Tory Party leadership contest and assume office. Assuming I get a non-hacked voting paper from the Harrogate & Knaresborough Conservative Association I’ll be putting a cross next to Rishi Sunak’s name. If Liz Truss does win it will be another example of the maxim that “he who wields the dagger never yields the prize”, Sunak having led with Sajid Javed the avalanche of ministerial resignations that finally put paid to Boris Johnson.
For the life of me I can’t see the logic of the aggressive tax cuts that Liz Truss proposes. To paraphrase Maurice Saatchi’s famous “Labour isn’t working” political advertising slogan from the 1980’s, an argument can be made that “Britain isn’t working.” The NHS has moved beyond perpetual ‘crisis’ and is now in real trouble, with waiting lists soaring for everything from cancer treatment to mental health treatment, nary an ambulance in sight when you need one and chronic staff shortages. It takes an age to get a passport and, when you do, the airports are carnage. The DVLA can’t get a driver’s license organised for love nor money and with a series of national train strikes and 7-hour queues to take a ferry to France, travelling in this country is becoming a Kafka-esque challenge. Planes, trains, and automobiles indeed. I haven’t even mentioned the disaster that is immigration policy and our handling of the small boats influx on our shores. Reform may well be part of the answer but setting all these right needs real money and competent grip. Economists who support Ms. Truss’ plan to tax cut our way to economic growth to fund all this are thin on the ground. Like North Yorkshire’s coming new elected Mayor, Ms. Truss’ real task is to find imaginative policy solutions to our problems, from skills to housing, from transport to health and then find a way to run them properly. And that takes public money, gobs of it.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
Read More:
- Mayor for North Yorkshire agreed in £540m historic devolution deal
- North Yorkshire’s devolution deal: What’s in it and how will it work?
- Liberal Democrats call for public vote over North Yorkshire devolution deal
Rishi Sunak “warmly received” in Masham
Rishi Sunak was warmly received at a hustings in Masham yesterday as he tried to garner support to become the next Conservative party leader and Prime Minister.
Mr Sunak took questions from a crowd of more than a hundred party members at the Black Sheep Brewery. He was asked about a wide range of issues from local farming to China.
Mr Sunak is in the final stages of a leadership contest with foreign secretary Liz Truss, to become the next Conservative leader and Prime Minister.
Both need the votes of Conservative party members. Mr Sunak, so far, is behind in the polls.
Amongst those present at the hustings in Masham was Ripon and Skipton MP, Julian Smith and Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, Andrew Jones. Both are backing Mr Sunak.
Mr Smith tweeted after the event:
Great to welcome @RishiSunak to a packed @BlackSheepBeer in #masham today. Excellent feedback from @conservatives members across North Yorkshire #Ready4Rishi pic.twitter.com/aCY9s3gZy2
— Julian Smith MP (@JulianSmithUK) July 24, 2022
Chris Brown, a former Harrogate Borough councillor, asked Mr Sunak a question about the serious problems facing farming – particularly the issue of volatile prices.
He was happy with Mr Sunak’s answer:
“He said he’d been on a diary farm and a pig farm and had actually worked not just visited. I was impressed by that. He’d done more than just homework. I was impressed that he had an understanding of farming.”
Mr Brown though said he remained undecided about who to vote for and was waiting to hear from Liz Truss who he thought would also visit the region.
Mr Sunak’s campaign has centred on not lowering taxes in the short term to curb inflation. Another attendee, Nick Brown, conservative councillor on both Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council, said he felt many there agreed with this approach:
“I think there were a fair number there who were predisposed towards him. Sound money is what’s really important, keeping a check on inflation.
“The majority of younger people won’t remember the 1970s – I had to pay 19% interest on my mortgage! People do not understand how inflation can cripple families.”
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