“…In this sense, a key analytic tool is the notion of interpretative repertoires or “coherent ways of speaking that form over time, becoming easily recognisable arguments, assumptions, metaphors, figures of speech, and images” (Van Der Merwe & Wetherell, 2020, p. 230). Such repertoires reflect collectively shared understandings of social life, and talk is understood as drawing on rhetorically persuasive strategies that have currency in a particular culture (McConville et al, 2020). The current analysis focuses on identifying the discursive repertoires mobilised by politicians when making sense of accusations of bullying and intimidation, and how these discursive framings functioned to achieve particular versions of (political) reality.…”