To the extent, at least, that it gets her out of the house a bit. Although he apparently hates attention, so I imagine he won't be entirely disappointed when the cameras go away.
Other that that: no, I've not encountered anyone who specifically want Theresa May to be Prime Minister any longer. Some people might still think she's better than the alternatives on offer, but I don't think there's any actual enthusiasm for her. Well, I'm sure there's some Tory grassroots somewhere who'll wave a flag for her because she's PM, but they're a minority even in her own party.
Yougov's latest tracking poll puts the number of people who think she's doing a good job at 32%, against 57% who think she's doing a bad job and 11% who aren't sure. 31% think she should stay to contest the next election - including only 55% of people who intend to vote conservative. And those headlines flatter her - sure, 29% are willing to say she's doing "fairly well", but only 3% say she's doing "very well"!
The next question in their poll begins "thinking about who becomes party leader after Theresa May steps down..." - which is not an encouraging for a question about a PM to start!
Boris is the most popular replacement - a whole 10% think he'd be very good at the job (compared to 1% each for Gove and Hunt). On the other hand, 54% would describe him as "incompetent" and 58% as "untrustworthy". There is no Tory candidate with a positive public rating - the closest is Mordaunt, who is on only -11%, largely because 66% of people don't know who she is and another 13% have no opinion. Their best bet is Javid - 18% think he'd be a good leader, and only 30% think he'd be bad.
73% think Brexit is going badly, with 2% thinking that we have the 'advantage' over the EU so far, and 8% thinking the right sort of Brexit will be delivered. Only 22% think there'll be any sort of deal, but only 18% say leaving with no deal would make them happy (55% say it would make them unhappy).
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Read an article in the Guardian with a nice phrase that sums up the party factions. Comparing the Tory conference to a family:
Just as adult family squabbles bring with them that same sense of “Why am I still dealing with this shit?”, so it is here: the patrician fossils aren’t talking to the reckless Atlanticists, and the oleaginous metropolitan wing is at odds with the racist granddads – and Cousin Jacob must have his special plate.
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BUT! Here's a positive thing: among 18-34s, the charity about which most people have heard something good lately is the National Trust - astonishingly, over 45% of young people have heard good things about the National Trust from their family or friends in the last two weeks. That's just ahead of Mind, the mental health charity. The rest of the top ten are the Dogs Trust (DOGS!), the Battersea Dogs Home (DOGS!), Guide Dogs (DOGS!), Macmillan (Cancer!), the British Heart Foundation, Children in Need, Cancer Research (Cancer!) and the RSPCA (DOGS!!). We're living up to national stereotypes (DOGS!) at least. Set up a charity to let children with cancer walk dogs in parks and you're the most popular person in the world...
For those, who don't know: The National Trust is a quango (privately run and funded, but with some statutory powers), founded in 1895, dedicated to conservation. Its two big things are preserving old palatial country houses and estates (mostly forfeited in lieu of tax in the mid-20th century) and conserving areas of natural beauty and wildlife preserves - though it does also own quirkier things, like some celebrity houses and representative industrial and working class heritage sites. It's the largest private landowner in the country, owning about 1.5% of the country (including 20% of the coastline) - its nature sites are usually freely accessible, while its buildings and estates usually have a fee, but are free with membership. It's one of the largest private organisation in the world - around 10% of the adult population are members.
So it's nice that even if our current leaders don't know what they're doing, the youth of today seem like they might keep some of the better things in British culture alive...