When tonight's leadership debate opened all five candidates were introduced - wearing suits and ties.
Nothing really all that remarkable in that - politician's dressing like politicians.
But after a few minutes renegade Rory Stewart - who may or may not be a spy - seemed to have taken his off.
Now nobody remarked on it, they were all too busy not answering questions and speaking over one another.
But we are sort of wondering why? It is to prove he is down with the kids.
The FT's feature writer Henry Mance had an idea of perhaps why.
He tweeted: "Surely Rory Stewart can't kill all four of them with just his tie"
Asked about Brexit the candidates eventually had to be asked to raise their hands because they were speaking over each other.
But rather than be reassured by the responses from the leading Tories, she was left worried about the future.
Eventually the answers were so bad that she just rolled her eyes.
Candidates were also grilled about how they would cut taxes for the working class.
Millionaire ex-businessman Mr Hunt, who has trumpeted his past as an entrepreneur, said he wanted every worker to earn their first £1,000 a month without being hit by income tax or national insurance.
“That’s how you lighten the load,” he said.
He also vowed to cut taxes for business, pointing to Donald Trump’s business tax cuts which have triggered a surge in growth rates.
But Mr Johnson said he wanted to lift the higher rate income tax threshold - pouring thousands more into the wallets of those on up to £80,000 a year.
He said he wanted to “bring forward a package to help primarily the poorest in society, but I think it is sensible to have an ambition to raise the higher rate of tax for middle income earners”.
Targeting Tory activists who will decide the next leader, he said it was wrong for Conservatives to “seriously question” tax cuts for what he said were middle earners.
But Mr Gove, who torpedoed his rival’s 2016 leadership bid, hit back: “He’s concentrating on cutting taxes for those who earn what MPs earn and millionaires earn. I think that is wrong.”
Mr Stewart claimed his rivals were pledging “£84billion worth of tax cuts”.
Insisting any extra money should be pumped into public services, he said: “I don’t think this is the time to be cutting taxes.”