particularly at ease in that environment and he referred to hostile bowling from some of the questions that were coming his way. jeremyreally relish this opportunity to talk about his ideas and his policies because he is, and his own words, the underdog and has a lot of ground to make up here to catch boris johnson and the approval ratings among conservative members and indeed, the exposure that he is getting to the campaign where he hopes helps them gain some traction, getting a bit of momentum and close the gap on blowersjohnson, —— boris johnson. but both men sketching out the priorities and giving a good idea of the character and the type of prime minister that both would be. what did you make of the body language? because he found it quite interesting that he had his sleeves rolled up, making use of the stage livermore step you think all of that is important, showing that connection? body language in the way you carry yourself as a politician is usually important especially for those want to be prime minister. yes, jeremy hunt rolled up his sleeves, probably a deliberate move to show that he was literally getting