politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The media is getting a lot more critical of the government

One of the challenges for the government is that the lockdown demands an enormous lot of the population as a whole which in return ministers have to give the appearance of competence in the management of this huge crisis.
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China’s coronavirus diplomacy has finally pushed Europe too far
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2020/04/22/asia-pacific/politics-diplomacy-asia-pacific/china-coronavirus-diplomacy-europe/
.... With stock prices tumbling on the coronavirus crisis, countries including Germany that have investment screening regulations have tightened them and extended their scope in response to concerns that China, among others, could take controlling stakes in companies suddenly made vulnerable. EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager suggested in a Financial Times interview that governments go further and buy stakes in companies themselves to stave off the threat of Chinese takeovers.
More far-reaching still are proposals to curb dependence on China, not just for medical supplies but in areas such as battery technology for electric vehicles. EU Trade Commissioner Phil Hogan said last week there’s a need for a discussion “on what it means to be strategically autonomous,” including building “resilient supply chains, based on diversification, acknowledging the simple fact that we will not be able to manufacture everything locally.” Japan already earmarked $2.2 billion from its $1 trillion stimulus package to help its manufacturers shift production away from China.
Without mentioning China, EU trade ministers agreed in an April 16 call on the importance of diversifying to “reduce the reliance on individual countries of supply.” As a first step, Berlin plans state funds and purchase guarantees to start industrial production of millions of surgical and face masks by late summer. China currently exports 25 percent of the world’s face masks....
Valerie Jarrett: 'No chance' Michelle Obama will be Biden's VP
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/494009-valerie-jarret-no-chance-michelle-obama-will-be-bidens-vp
The reason why I'm being so unequivocal is that there just simply has never been a time when she's expressed an interest in running for office,” Jarrett said in an interview with The Hill. “She’s not demurring here. She’s not being hard to get. She doesn’t want the job.”...
... “There is a difference between being a public servant and being a politician, and she has no interest in being a politician,” Jarrett said. “Her husband was interested in being both. She’s only interested in the service component.”
On topic I'd say the media has been pretty critical from day 1 and has been trying to sow discord and disunity from the start in an attempt to keep the punters buying. The only polling we've seen so far shows the public take a dim view of this. Of course it could change but so many of the stories on the front pages turn out to be plain wrong I wouldn't be so sure.
I might not the best one to comment on Conservative ministers, since I've never voted Tory, but am I the only one to be irritated by the constant assertion, implied or overt, that on all occasions the best possible decisions have been made?
ALSO- what felix wrote.
Well done Mike, Robert, TSE and team - and for putting up with some of less than perfect behaviour at times!
Time to choke off the basis of its economic success until it politically reforms.
Neville Chamberlain – Prime Minister and Leader of the House of Commons
Sir Samuel Hoare – Lord Privy Seal (previously Sacked over the Hoare-Laval pact)
Sir John Simon – Chancellor of the Exchequer (a former Liberal described by his own friends as a corrupt, dishonest and treacherous slimeball)
Lord Halifax – Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
Leslie Hore-Belisha – Secretary of State for War (spent most of his time trying to get all his top generals sacked)
Sir Kingsley Wood – Secretary of State for Air (opposed to the idea of bombing Germany’s industrial centres, although ironically he was arguably right about that)
Winston Churchill – First Lord of the Admiralty (unstable and racist adventurer who had just happened to be right about Hitler)
Lord Chatfield – Minister for Coordination of Defence (former admiral who believed the key weapon of war was the battleship, supported by cruisers)
Lord Hankey – Minister without Portfolio (former Civil Servant who had advised Lloyd George).
What a bunch of luminaries, eh?
I suspect he just made a promise that is actually far harder to deliver than thought.
Here for instance is the Gold Cup, the biggest race of the week. Time it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfpxTcqy-G4
https://twitter.com/alistairhaimes/status/1248257238290116610?s=21
You could limit the number of horses in the race - jockeys don't really get closer than 2m to each other anyway, except at the start line which could be spaced - and also insist on having no live spectators.
Behind the scenes stables and stablehands could be managed to ensure separation as well.
Hey presto, you have horse racing again minus some of the atmosphere.
By whom, I wonder?
And plenty of people on the tube that week were not doing essential travel, they were tourists, visiting friends, shopping as well - there would have been more of those on the London tube than Cheltenham visitors.
And the present lot are not even that good!
The government was ridiculously overpraised at the outset and some of its early poor decisions are coming under belated scrutiny. The public is willing the government to succeed, being personally invested in its success, so it has a lot of support to draw upon. A lot, but not limitless.
Mr. Meeks, were they ludicrously overpraised?
I've been paying less attention to the news for a while now, so I could've missed it, but most of the Twitter stuff was criticism of the delay to lockdown and condemnation (justified) of letting Cheltenham go ahead, plus the slightly odd fixation with a scheme that hasn't delivered any of the desired equipment (which we seem to have enough of anyway).
He wrote all the songs for the first three albums before the first one was recorded, that’s why the third one was not all that.
https://www.racingpost.com/news/coronavirus/hammerblow-as-galway-manager-moloney-admits-festival-behind-closed-doors-likely/432138
Whether even that is a good idea PR-wise I am not sure.
Still, one better than Tracy Chapman, who had one great album, then the well ran dry.
(I didn't say it was a good joke.)
Laval of course had a more dramatic fate. Hoare ended up in the Lords, Laval ended up in front of a firing squad.
Whether the public will turn against them is a whole different issue. If we mirror the US then Donald Trump's approval ratings are slumping.
Clearly we have failed relative to Germany on testing, and not been able to explain why.
PPE was always going to be a challenge, even if NHS and care homes had everything they need, then there would still (rightly) be clamour for it to be available for dentists, bus drivers, supermarket staff etc. However much we have there will always be excess demand in this scenario so it will be rationed and those next in line to get it will feel very frustrated and let down.
Its on the timelines and international comparisons that I feel compelled to defend the govt, history is being re-written on the timelines of what happened in March, and international comparisons are rarely objective, the countries and stats picked are chosen to make the govt look bad or good depending on the author.
Fishing should be positively encouraged. I was delighted to see a salmon fisherman out yesterday.
There was an early sign that the government was stumbling when the Health Minister went down with Covid-19. And the Health Secretary. And the Prime Minister. And the Prime Minister’s partner. And the Chief Medical Officer. At that point it should have been obvious that the government didn’t understand what it was dealing with. But it wasn’t.
It wasn't my description, incidentally, it was quoted by Churchill (who was a fine one to talk about traitors to their party). Churchill hated Simon. When he became PM, he elevated Simon to the peerage and made him Lord Chancellor for the duration of the war, but outside the war cabinet. In 1945, in the caretaker government, he retained Simon as Chancellor but out of that same longstanding spite refused to let him attend Cabinet meetings, making him the only Lord Chancellor not to be a member of the Cabinet.
Have a good morning.
I didn't pay any attention to the newspapers.
I’m currently, at 5 to 8 in the morning, watching the Classic Albums doc on Dark Side of the Moon for about the 50th time in order to avoid Piers Morgan on GMB (whilst entertaining a 5 month old baby) Great doc about a great album
I think the daily press briefing is getting slightly better. Not quite so many moronic questions, but the "Can you guarantee …?" nonsense continues. You can't guarantee that the sun will rise tomorrow, you thicko. And there's still the odd "My mammy says you smell of poo? Why won't you say sorry?"
At least, they're finally getting the hang of the difference between antigen and antibody.
And before anyone mentions it, Led Zep IV obvs.
Have you seen those communist redtops otherwise known as The Times and Daily Telegraph this morning?
I never made any such statement or prediction.
Leadership (Especially setting realistic objectives)
Decision making (timely, good judgement, accountable)
Representing the electorates priorities inside government
Unblocking political problems (using authority to get thing moving)
Communication
Not sure we can give any of them a great score.
objectives have been unrealistic
Decision making has been hesitant and accountability delegated to scientists
civil servants seems to have a better grip on the electorates priorities
critical equipment keeps getting blocked, money has been slow to arrive and ministerial clout seems ineffective
communication has at times been very confused and counter productive
Some ministers are better than others. Some you have to ask, what is the point.
Helen Whatley's interview this morning on BBHC1 was a bit of a shocker.
At the moment, even though I have a subscription to the Times it's difficult to justify the 100 yard walk to the corner shop.
All his own work.
Generally the second album is the best one though. Wishbone Ash never surpassed the sublime Argus.
On the other hand there are some great third albums. Parallel lines is Blondie at their best.
The key objective was to stop the NHS being overwhelmed to the point of it not being able to function - achieved.
What would the response have been if the govt overruled the scientists?
Criticial equipment gets blocked because other countries are chasing the same stuff and people are looking to make quick bucks exploiting the situation.
On the business side, money hasnt been slow imo, we have received a grant already and should get the furlough money by the end of the month. Its an extremely generous scheme given the circumstances and delivered on time.
Communication has been confused because people arent very good at dealing with uncertainty.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hokGXqEsCXk
More gigs released by them every Friday!
The alternative is that a senior civil servant should have gone to a select committee, for which he no doubt prepared thoroughly, and then held forth on a subject about which he knew nothing. That seems improbable.
If you watch the video clip, he was clearly choosing his words carefully there and he wasn't looking to be indiscreet - the opposite, he looks as though he could say an awful lot more.
Ok, I will. There's an increasingly detectable division in Leaver ranks on Coronavirus. It's coming out through press, twitter and even on here.
On the one hand, you have the libertarian Leavers (Dan Hannan, Alison Pearson, Toby Young and Steve Baker) who are arguing for a loosening and lifting of the lockdown as soon as possible.
On the other, you have hitherto staunch Leavers walking lockstep hand in hand with them (mostly older and more vulnerable with health issues) now starting to throw stones at them the other way - wanting the lockdown to continue as long as possible.
I haven't detected too many divisions on the Remainer side. Except some want to make a thing out of the EU ventilator procurement scheme and a few irreconcilables want to attack Boris and his Government and undermine it as much as possible.
Worried that only 5.7% of population have had it and concerned on 2nd wave.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/04/21/europe-eases-lockdown-french-warned-second-wave-risk-six-per/
Is this really the time to be having that debate?
He went to the committee. He told the truth. The government has gone postal. A "did I say black? I meant white" letter has been thrown together - by SPADS not the author - which he has been forced to sign on pain of his career.
And its such an awful job that its blatantly obvious he's been nobbled - which enables the truth of his statements to the select committee to be amplified far more than then were. Well done Boris!
The buck stops with the ministers, not the advisers.
Examination of the reality by groups such as www.theregister.co.uk revealed in such cases that said projects violated every single rule of good procurement practise.
In short, there is a history of civil servants confidently talking utters bollocks at select committees.
Bit like politicians really. Do you think the two species could share DNA or something?
The French carefully, cautiously and quite definitely lost the war in months.
I am not sure it will fix the underlying problems though.