Why BBC Tory leader debate is not happening, and why it matters
You can learn a lot about modern election campaigns by looking at the rows about TV debates.
And the current Conservative leadership race is no different.
More often than not, the perceived frontrunner is rather more circumspect about putting themselves on a potential collision course with calamity or embarrassment than the perceived challenger.
And, therefore, they might find reasons to turn down appointments with the cameras.
So it appears in the tussle between Kemi Badenoch and Robert Jenrick.
As they each vie to replace Rishi Sunak to become the Leader of the Opposition, Jenrickâs holding position is to say âyesâ to invites to interviews and journalistic scrutiny and Badenochâs is to often say ânoâ.
To be clear, it is of course their prerogative to choose who to talk to and this is a popularity contest among tens of thousands of Conservative Party members rather than tens of millions of the wider UK electorate.
So, understandably, the focus principally, for now, is on reaching them rather than a broader audience.
Last night, both candidates took part in a two hour special on GB News.
It wasnât a debate between the two of them directly â each appeared separately to take questions from a studio audience of Conservative Party members and viewers at home.
At the end, for what it is worth, an overwhelming majority of the audience in the room endorsed Badenoch.
But a planned Question Time special on BBC One next week and a programme planned by The Sun are currently off, after objections from Badenoch.
The BBC wrote to both candidates inviting them to its live programme next Thursday, in which around half the studio audience would be recent Conservative voters with a âbalanceâ of those who had a strong preference for Jenrick or Badenoch.
The other half would be people âwith a variety of political sentiments and voting history, many of whom will have voted Conservative at some point in the past,â the letter set out, adding:
âWe know the Conservative party leadership will be decided by party members, but the election of the Leader of HM Opposition is a moment of clear and wide public interest.â
While Jenrick, I understand, had some issues with this plan, he said yes to the invitation and was willing to attend.
Badenoch said no.
Her team argue that the Conservative Party has stipulated that the programme must be in-keeping with rules set out by the Conservative Party Board.
One of these rules is that the live audience must be made up of people who have a vote in the contest â in other words, Conservative Party members.
The BBC has said that the audience âmust be compliant with the BBCâs duties as a public service broadcaster, which are not the same as for a party event.â
And so there is deadlock, an impasse.
âIt is in cold storage,â said one source.
Were both candidates to accept the BBCâs invitation â or any other from another outlet â there is little the Conservative Party centrally could likely do to stop them, Iâm told.
All this illustrates a wider gulf between the two camps about their campaigning approach.
It is a gulf Team Jenrick have sought to emphasise, by adopting a âany time, any place, anywhereâ philosophy to requests for public debates or hustings.
They have done this knowing their opponent is less keen and in the hope they can point to this as an illustration of why Jenrick, in their view, is better suited to be Leader of the Opposition than Badenoch.
The thrust of their argument is the job is all about making your case publicly and taking questions from all comers, so prove you can do it now.
But Team Badenoch argue they donât knowingly throw rules set down by the national party out of the window on a whim â unlike their opponents â and they are ruthlessly focused on talking to those with a vote in this election.
And, they argue, they have the most MPs, the most former MPs, the most peers and the most councillors backing their campaign.
The new leader of the Conservative Party will be announced on Saturday 2 November.