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Will Boris Johnson announce his resignation before the end of January? – politicalbetting.com

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  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,364
    rcs1000 said:

    Ah... not John Crawley's son then?
    No. No relation.
  • IanB2 said:

    Their motivation was undoubtedly personal.

    But the political argument put to the PM was probably along the lines of “if there’s a recall petition there’s a risk of a by-election and if there’s an election there’s a small risk you might lose it. Why risk such a wobble to your premiership at such a time?”

    But maybe I am being naive, and they just quietly pushed an envelope with photos of some random musician across the table and said “your call…”
    That is not right. Boris's main concern was not to save Owen Paterson but to use the OP affair as an excuse to ram through changes that would neuter the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Kathryn Stone, who might (and might yet) investigate Wallpapergate, that might end Boris's premiership.
  • eek said:

    Isn't it the opposite and Boris has to pay a significant amount of his income - for he went up against an angry barrister unprepared.
    With a self-imposed, baby shaped deadline to meet, so he had to take what he was given.

    Insert Bexit deal joke here.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    .@timloughton becomes the 6th Conservative to call for Johnson to resign.

    Loughton 6th to call for BJ to go. Brexiteer & BJ backer told me last night they not putting in letter (yet) but mood in constituency “very bad”. Whether PM wld have to go? Said 50:50 (& in wks not mths)

    https://twitter.com/BethRigby/status/1482632193495252995
    https://twitter.com/timloughton/status/1482463465629495297
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,364

    With a self-imposed, baby shaped deadline to meet, so he had to take what he was given.

    Insert Bexit deal joke here.
    Surely a bed sit deal?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,252
    ydoethur said:

    No. No relation.
    I knew John Crawley (a little) at University. I played about as many times for Trinity as he did. Albeit never in the same games.

    I'd just assumed Zac was his son.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,252
    Ouch.

    Burns goes.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,093
    Eabhal said:

    While I'm in the lockdown-sceptic camp, I really dislike this hindsight "omichron was completely fine in the end" attitude.

    It's clear that public health messaging got through over Christmas and that had a big impact on reducing cases (even though they went to 250,000!), mainly through people spamming LFTs. Without the scare stories before hand I don't think we'd be in this position.
    The only disappointing thing is we didn't push the anti-anti-vaxxer argument harder (particularly in Scotland), filming in hospital wards etc. Baffles me.

    Also confused by the lack of effort put into reducing obesity. Every time there is a "no underlying health condition" story, you just wait for the photo and....

    We are 21 months into the pandemic. At a very chill half pound per week, you'd have lost over 3 stone over the course of the pandemic.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,364
    edited January 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    Ouch.

    Burns goes.

    Oz still just about able to win by more than 200...

    Incidentally that is why Burns is not the answer to England's opening problem, and nor is Chris Dent, who has an even better domestic record but exactly the same technical flaw.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    Oliver Dowden says the allegations of parties were "totally wrong" he says he was "angered by them" and when the PM responds to the Gray report in the Commons, he will "address the kind of culture that allowed that to happen".
    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482633358194663427
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    rcs1000 said:

    Ah... not John Crawley's son then?
    If it's any consolation up until a few months ago I was also certain he was John Crawley's son.
  • What fresh hell is this?

    https://tenlegend.com/

    Think I preferred the soccer casuals when they were, well, casual. Not cheap either, but this sort of ‘gentlemen in love with football’ wank was bound to come at a premium.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,364
    Scott_xP said:

    Oliver Dowden says the allegations of parties were "totally wrong" he says he was "angered by them" and when the PM responds to the Gray report in the Commons, he will "address the kind of culture that allowed that to happen".
    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482633358194663427

    So he will quit then?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    The Sunday Rawnsley:

    No other premiership has had such a pathetically shabby ending. No finale to his slummy reign would be more appropriate. It has always been highly likely that cavalier and blatant rule-breaking, and then lying about it, would be the undoing of a prime minister with a career history of casual contempt for truth and integrity.

    Conservative MPs now profess their shock-horror at the torrent of revelations about booze-ups at Number 10, but few expressed concern about earlier disgraces when it didn’t appear to be costing them support. It was often averred that a substantial chunk of the public enjoyed having a “lovable rogue” at Number 10.

    Here we have a scandal that even the great trickster can’t blag his way out of. His attempt to sound contrite didn’t work because it was a non-apology apology so reeking with insincerity that it added insult to the injury felt by the many who have been bereaved by the pandemic. It is hard to say which is the more jaw-dropping. The flagrancy of the rule-breaking. The arrogant stupidity of it. Or the stunning frequency with which the denizens of Number 10 behaved as if laws did not apply to them. On Mr Johnson’s watch, during the most severe pandemic in more than a century and on the eve of the burial of the monarch’s consort, Number 10 was turned into a nightclub.

    A growing number of Tory backbenchers think he should go, as do quite a lot of ministers, including some of the cabinet who are professing insincere loyalty oaths. Truth to tell, most Conservative MPs are exercised by this scandal because it makes them fearful of losing power, not because of what it says about the prime minister’s ethical character. They knew who he was. They made him their leader because they thought that winning is all that matters in politics and he looked like a winner. Far too many people in the Tory party chose to ignore his unfitness to be prime minister.

    If they had bothered themselves with that question before, they wouldn’t have put him in Number 10 in the first place, nor shrugged so cynically at all the squalor that has ineluctably followed.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    You get the sense of the contours of the 'Op Save Big Dog' narrative here...

    - PM made the right call on Omicron & should stay.
    - PM will take steps to address the 'culture' that allowed bad behaviour to fester.

    Begs the question, who is really responsible for that 'culture'?

    Oliver Dowden says that there will need to be a "change in culture" following party revelations but adds the PM is "committed to leading that".


    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482634183432454146
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,454
    Mr. Eabhal, the 'tolerance' of not criticising or trying to get people to change when they're dangerously obese (fat-shaming, indeed) has led to more deaths from this.

    And even without COVID-19, being significantly overweight is obviously detrimental to health. We should encourage people to try and get fitter or at least shed stones of fat, for their own sake.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    What fresh hell is this?

    https://tenlegend.com/

    Think I preferred the soccer casuals when they were, well, casual. Not cheap either, but this sort of ‘gentlemen in love with football’ wank was bound to come at a premium.

    Driving gloves as well. It’s all a bit Alan Partridge.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486

    What fresh hell is this?

    https://tenlegend.com/

    Think I preferred the soccer casuals when they were, well, casual. Not cheap either, but this sort of ‘gentlemen in love with football’ wank was bound to come at a premium.

    299 dollars for a shirt.

    It’s hardly Stone Island.
  • Noted. Euan Blair is left alone, of course.
    Will Johnson die a rich man, I wonder. I know about the probability of well-paid newspaper articles and speaking engagements, but as you say his track record as a money manager isn't good.
    Euan Blair was left alone, rightly, as a child of the Prime Minister. Of the spouses, however, Cherie Blair faced worse treatment than Carrie. In particular her wide mouth was an endless source for comedy and cartoons. Sarah Brown was perhaps insulated by personal tragedy but SamCam was hardly ever out of the papers, though rarely criticised. Press treatment of Carrie as informal advisor and confidante is roughly equivalent to Denis Thatcher, without the suggestion she is permanently three sheets to the wind (ironically, in view of partygate).
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,486
    Cookie said:

    If it's any consolation up until a few months ago I was also certain he was John Crawley's son.
    As was I until I read your post.
  • Driving gloves as well. It’s all a bit Alan Partridge.
    The original Facebook link defaulted to $ so I suspect it may be a US vision of what soccerball is all about.
  • Driving gloves as well. It’s all a bit Alan Partridge.
    Conventional shirts defaced by a hideous logo and with a spurious connection to football.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884
    Of course Boris will not resign by the end of January. He will also want to get some bounce from ending Covid restrictions at the end of the month
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,093

    Mr. Eabhal, the 'tolerance' of not criticising or trying to get people to change when they're dangerously obese (fat-shaming, indeed) has led to more deaths from this.

    And even without COVID-19, being significantly overweight is obviously detrimental to health. We should encourage people to try and get fitter or at least shed stones of fat, for their own sake.

    I wouldn't mind people being obese, smoking etc if we didn't have a public health service. The huge strain it is under, and the massive cost, should be stemmed at source as quickly as possible.

    It's not just a moral hazard problem, though. See the US.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,536

    Euan Blair was left alone, rightly, as a child of the Prime Minister. Of the spouses, however, Cherie Blair faced worse treatment than Carrie. In particular her wide mouth was an endless source for comedy and cartoons. Sarah Brown was perhaps insulated by personal tragedy but SamCam was hardly ever out of the papers, though rarely criticised. Press treatment of Carrie as informal advisor and confidante is roughly equivalent to Denis Thatcher, without the suggestion she is permanently three sheets to the wind (ironically, in view of partygate).
    Know what you mean about Cherie Blair's looks. Very unfair and unkind. She, of course, had, and still has, a career independent of her husband.
    Carrie Johnson is, for some reason which I don't quite understand, treated with kid gloves. Perhaps it's her pregnancies.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,288

    Conventional shirts defaced by a hideous logo and with a spurious connection to football.
    Sounds like a description of this season's NUFC shirt.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    I'm unconvinced that Carrie is fair game, at least to the extent she seems to be vilified.
    Indeed. People consult their spouses on things, that's a given, but is there really evidence she is the powerful puppet master who has her own cabal running the show as seems to get alleged? Most of the testimony as to her influence seems to come back to Cummings, who is somewhat unreliable when he's clearly got a personal vendetta against his old boss.

    She's fair game for criticism if Boris is taking her advice on things. But the extent of that criticism seems disproportionate as to her probable influence.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,536
    HYUFD said:

    Of course Boris will not resign by the end of January. He will also want to get some bounce from ending Covid restrictions at the end of the month

    Not even if 54 (or whatever it is) MP's get their letters into Sir Graham's office? Or he's eviscerated by Ms Grey's report?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Mr. Sandpit, interesting... Sainz might be worth a shot, for each way (I think Ladbrokes, annoyingly, only has it as a straight win). Heard anything on Hamilton?

    Mr. eek, possibly. I'd still be quite surprised if he didn't compete but the odds have shifted.

    No-one has heard a squeak from Lewis for about five weeks now.

    Maybe he’s awaiting the result of the FIA enquiry into the last race, maybe he’s awaiting confirmation that the new car is going to be competitive, or maybe he’s just training hard and not allowing himself to be distracted by anything.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited January 2022

    Know what you mean about Cherie Blair's looks. Very unfair and unkind. She, of course, had, and still has, a career independent of her husband.
    Carrie Johnson is, for some reason which I don't quite understand, treated with kid gloves. Perhaps it's her pregnancies.
    Mrs J = Tory, by proxy anyway.

    Mrs B = Labour ditto.

    Edit: and the media are on balance pro-Tory.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,102

    F1: bit of movement on Ladbrokes, Hamilton out to 2.5, Verstappen in to the same number.

    I wonder if this is a reaction to the outside possibility of Hamilton not competing next year.

    Russell's also down from around 6 or 6.5 to 5.

    Can’t see that myself. Noted that the FIA investigation very handily reveals its findings on the 18th March…Hamilton will be back to prove a point (I hope)
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,781
    Scott_xP said:

    You get the sense of the contours of the 'Op Save Big Dog' narrative here...

    - PM made the right call on Omicron & should stay.
    - PM will take steps to address the 'culture' that allowed bad behaviour to fester.

    Begs the question, who is really responsible for that 'culture'?

    Oliver Dowden says that there will need to be a "change in culture" following party revelations but adds the PM is "committed to leading that".


    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482634183432454146

    On the first point: yes, but
    1) Plan B restrictions were pointless, stupid and damaging (not as pointless, stupid and damaging as those brought in by the Scots and Welsh, but pointless stupid and damaging nonetheless), and
    2) Do we believe that avoiding further restrictions in the run-up to Christmas - that very odd day when the nature of the restrictions we would have was leaked to the press, the presser was set up, only for everyone to be marched back down the hill again - was down to Boris? Someone can take credit for that - the Cabinet, or certain people in it, some of the backbenchers, Fraser Nelson perhaps -but I'm not sure Boris can.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884
    edited January 2022

    Not even if 54 (or whatever it is) MP's get their letters into Sir Graham's office? Or he's eviscerated by Ms Grey's report?
    Boris won't resign. He will force his opponents amongst Tory MPs first to get the 54 letters in and then to get the 51% of Tory MPs + to vote against him in a VONC to remove him.

    He knows they probably still don't have the numbers for either yet
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    One curiosity about the PM is why do even his worst critics, who know he constantly lies, automatically believe him when he says he is skint. I would not at all be surprised if he has comfortable seven figures in the bank but simply enjoys getting other people to pay for him.
    Its believed because it aligns with the accepted image of him as personally a mess.

    I mean, ye gods, he didn't even have any tax dodges set up when running for mayor!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Cookie said:

    On the first point: yes, but
    1) Plan B restrictions were pointless, stupid and damaging (not as pointless, stupid and damaging as those brought in by the Scots and Welsh, but pointless stupid and damaging nonetheless), and
    2) Do we believe that avoiding further restrictions in the run-up to Christmas - that very odd day when the nature of the restrictions we would have was leaked to the press, the presser was set up, only for everyone to be marched back down the hill again - was down to Boris? Someone can take credit for that - the Cabinet, or certain people in it, some of the backbenchers, Fraser Nelson perhaps -but I'm not sure Boris can.
    That also raises the question of the motives. It certainly wasn't coherently or rationally planned.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    That is not right. Boris's main concern was not to save Owen Paterson but to use the OP affair as an excuse to ram through changes that would neuter the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Kathryn Stone, who might (and might yet) investigate Wallpapergate, that might end Boris's premiership.
    In which case he should have let Paterson face the music and then draw on the sympathy the man had due to his wife, and say it all looked unfair this needs looking at.

    The urgency of the action which included saving Paterson made the larger goal impossible.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,884
    edited January 2022
    pigeon said:

    Novaxgate: Djokovic loses appeal, to be deported from Australia

    Scott Morrison poll bounce incoming now the unvaccinated Djokovic is to be deported
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,192
    HYUFD said:

    Of course Boris will not resign by the end of January. He will also want to get some bounce from ending Covid restrictions at the end of the month

    I am not sure an ending of restrictions benefits him at all under the circumstances. Anything to do with restrictions reminds us he didn't follow them.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,454
    Mr. Eabhal, on money, smoking is actually a positive for the NHS as the tax take exceeds the medical costs. Not great for those dying of emphysema and cancer, of course.

    Mr. Abode, I think it's unlikely, but not impossible.
  • HYUFD said:

    Scott Morrison bounce incoming now the unvaccinated Djokovic is to be deported
    Boris would get a massive poll bounce if he decided to deport the PM.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Re the modelling on R4 Today yday they had the head of one of the public health bodies on. Justin Webb put the numbers to her and said that the worst case presented was way out and she responded by saying the models gave a range and that the actual outcome corresponded to the best case as though that was justification for the models accuracy.

    She was not asked why what actually happened didn't more closely correspond to the central case.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,536
    HYUFD said:

    Boris won't resign. He will force his opponents amongst Tory MPs first to get the 54 letters in and then to get the 51% of Tory MPs + to vote against him in a VONC to remove him.

    He knows they probably still don't have the numbers for either yet
    He probably knows they still don't have the numbers for either yet.

    Fixed it.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    "I take full responsibility.. the people responsible have been sacked" - prime ministerial playbook defence.

    https://twitter.com/jillongovt/status/1482637371908792321?s=21
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    HYUFD said:

    Boris won't resign. He will force his opponents amongst Tory MPs first to get the 54 letters in and then to get the 51% of Tory MPs + to vote against him in a VONC to remove him.

    He knows they probably still don't have the numbers for either yet
    The view seems to be that getting the letters is the difficult bit. If they get to the voting stage, he's done.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Sandpit said:

    No-one has heard a squeak from Lewis for about five weeks now.

    Maybe he’s awaiting the result of the FIA enquiry into the last race, maybe he’s awaiting confirmation that the new car is going to be competitive, or maybe he’s just training hard and not allowing himself to be distracted by anything.
    He's having a strop by proxy since hes not just waiting hes had his people talk about him possibly not coming back.

    It's got justification, but its still no more than melodrama
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,102
    edited January 2022

    Mr. Eabhal, on money, smoking is actually a positive for the NHS as the tax take exceeds the medical costs. Not great for those dying of emphysema and cancer, of course.

    Mr. Abode, I think it's unlikely, but not impossible.

    I also think Merc will have a strong car this year - firing up before Christmas was a prettty strong statement of intent I reckon. I don’t think Ferrari will be as strong as some reckon..

    Either way, glad to see we’re building up to the car reveals. Believe Aston Martin first to launch on 10th February
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    If you really think your Government can win back the public by tossing out a panicky weekend threat to the BBC, then you under-estimate the level of support, admiration and respect the public has for it.
    https://twitter.com/Aiannucci/status/1482638472695398400
    https://twitter.com/nadinedorries/status/1482622722228240387
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    kle4 said:

    In which case he should have let Paterson face the music and then draw on the sympathy the man had due to his wife, and say it all looked unfair this needs looking at.

    The urgency of the action which included saving Paterson made the larger goal impossible.
    And it didn't need Charles Moore to tell him that.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    Good line from Labour "We want him to stay..."

    Shadow Health Sec Wes Streeting says if he was just thinking about party politics then he'd be calling for Boris Johnson to stay, as that would mean the Tories would be "knocked out" at the next election. But he says it's "in the national interest" for him to go.
    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482639304702705666
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    I think there is a large body of people who think Johnson is still in credit for Brexit, the vaccines, and not locking down.

    The parties might come to be seen, by the next GE, as part of the overall Covid madness that gripped the country.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Scott_xP said:

    Oliver Dowden says the allegations of parties were "totally wrong" he says he was "angered by them" and when the PM responds to the Gray report in the Commons, he will "address the kind of culture that allowed that to happen".
    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482633358194663427

    I love a good 'address the culture' dodge. A culture is made up of individuals who still have agency, it's not a magical shield that explains away a breach of a rule. We had a culture of leaving our houses more than once a day yet for a time most people tempered that in a critical moment.

    Boris being part of the culture it without knowing or being apart from it but still not knowing is no more than the last gasp political defence 'I'm a fool".

    And that's no defence for a PM.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,219
    edited January 2022
    The recent focus on getting rid of prescribed measures for alcohol is starting to make more sense. Number 10 staff were getting frustrated when the Co-op staff just looked bemused at requests for a suitcase of Sauvignon and a carry-on of Malbec.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,069
    edited January 2022
    Scott_xP said:

    Good line from Labour "We want him to stay..."

    Shadow Health Sec Wes Streeting says if he was just thinking about party politics then he'd be calling for Boris Johnson to stay, as that would mean the Tories would be "knocked out" at the next election. But he says it's "in the national interest" for him to go.
    https://twitter.com/robpowellnews/status/1482639304702705666

    Tbh on an always keep tight hold of nurse basis, it might be better if Boris stays than if he is replaced by some (early) Osborne-like austerity nut. It is a bit like President Trump stopping the Neocons starting any more wars.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    HYUFD said:

    Scott Morrison poll bounce incoming now the unvaccinated Djokovic is to be deported
    That posts a keeper 🙂
  • TOPPING said:

    I think there is a large body of people who think Johnson is still in credit for Brexit, the vaccines, and not locking down.

    The parties might come to be seen, by the next GE, as part of the overall Covid madness that gripped the country.

    Yes it is possible he can hang on till the GE but will need some luck especially with the economy and cost of living. Plus how many more damaging stories are already primed and awaiting release if he recovers slightly......
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    As ever, when things get tight for the Tories they, er, call for the BBC to get less money. Bizarre
    https://twitter.com/paulhutcheon/status/1482641236460777475
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    When I started work in the private sector forty years ago there was no booze at work. The pub at 6pm was all the booze we had.

    I hate to break it to them but most of the public, and private sectors, banned drinking at work two decades or more ago.

    And before Johnson it was very unusual in Downing St.


    https://twitter.com/colinrtalbot/status/1482640970105724935?s=20
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    IanB2 said:

    The view seems to be that getting the letters is the difficult bit. If they get to the voting stage, he's done.
    Wasn't for May.

    Granted who the hell wanted to take over in that period, but still.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Boris is going nowhere.

    As I said.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    "I take full responsibility.. the people responsible have been sacked" - prime ministerial playbook defence.

    https://twitter.com/jillongovt/status/1482637371908792321?s=21

    That was Gordon Brown, talking about Damien McBride, in about 2009 from memory.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,116
    ydoethur said:

    The question is whether Oz win by more or less than 200 runs.

    I’m firmly in the ‘more’ camp.
    Oh ye of so little faith.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    kle4 said:

    Indeed. People consult their spouses on things, that's a given, but is there really evidence she is the powerful puppet master who has her own cabal running the show as seems to get alleged? Most of the testimony as to her influence seems to come back to Cummings, who is somewhat unreliable when he's clearly got a personal vendetta against his old boss.

    She's fair game for criticism if Boris is taking her advice on things. But the extent of that criticism seems disproportionate as to her probable influence.
    Kabul air lift seems pretty clear, and an act of great evil.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    moonshine said:

    What to make of the Telegraph Carrie story, replete with photo of scissors legs.

    They’ll know it’s not dynamite with the reading public. But one gets the impression that the reading public are not the target. There is one reader this story is targeted at and his name is Boris Johnson.

    It’s gloves off stuff. “Unless you exit stage left, we are coming after your personal life and this is a mere amuse bouche to the 12 course tasting menu we have lined up”.

    Let us not forget that this is a man who for all his faults, has always done his best to retain a certain mystery about his family life. To the extent that until very recently his wikipedia entry had to caveat his many children he has.

    Quite something for the Boris Bible to take this approach. I am not tempted by TSE’s bet. Far too much uncertainty.

    I make of it bitchy catty factions having their fun, if the power hadn’t slipped away now they wouldn’t be able to.
  • When I started work in the private sector forty years ago there was no booze at work. The pub at 6pm was all the booze we had.

    I hate to break it to them but most of the public, and private sectors, banned drinking at work two decades or more ago.

    And before Johnson it was very unusual in Downing St.


    https://twitter.com/colinrtalbot/status/1482640970105724935?s=20

    Not sure that is right. I think offices started to ban alcohol and reduce boozy nights out more like 2010 than 2000. Around the millennium the big drinkers in my office might have 2-3 pints most lunchtimes, more on Fridays, and Friday evenings was unlimited paid for booze at the pub, which most people took as a means of starting getting pissed cheaply at least once a month.

    It has definitely reduced a lot now, with a quarter of youngsters being teetotal and many of the rest not wanting to make an arse of themselves on social media big factors.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    DavidL said:

    Oh ye of so little faith.
    Australia winning the series only 3-1 rather than the 5-0 their dominance deserves would be hilarious.
  • Foxy said:

    The reason that Johnson didn't back restrictions was because he knew they were not tenable in light of the partying that had already emerged.

    There were chaotic changes to travel rules, and while no formal ban on hospitality, encouragement for people to cancel and stay away. It wasn't just @Cyclefree Jr that had multiple cancellations. In practice was there much real difference in how busy things were on the other side of borders? And as nothing official, no compensation for those businesses.
    There definitely was a difference. In England where the mighty Boris followed the science at all times there was freedom and liberty and definitely not the same lack of people going out for Christmas and New year as in booo sociopath Sturgeon and Drakeford lands.

    Definitely. Huzzah for Boris!
  • IshmaelZ said:

    Kabul air lift seems pretty clear, and an act of great evil.
    Only if you believe the spin that animals took capacity from humans (they didn't) or that they kept soldiers from escorting people (unlikely).
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,397
    darkage said:

    Yes - in the end, it is all on his head.
    However, someone in No.10 should have been advising him. If she was the main advisor and she wasn't interested or involved, then there is a significant failure for which she is at least partly at fault.
    There is a delightful irony that perhaps the greatest Tory sycophant should be the person most responsible Johnson's ultimate ignominy. Such a shame Shakespeare isn't still around to pen what could have been his greatest Tragedy (or Comedy). "Baron Moore of Etchingham'.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,116
    How is Malan still there? Lucky boy.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,116
    No surprise. Looked a walking wicket
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    Pulpstar said:

    Ffs bod on sky linking the volcano to climate change.
    Large volcanic eruptions can actually cool the planet a bit iirc

    Yes, large explosive volcanoes can inject sulphate aerosols into the upper atmosphere, where they block out the sun and cool the planet for a year or two. Though sometimes you have a large eruption that has a low sulphur content, so much less of an effect.
  • Scott_xP said:

    There can be no Cummings Coup. Boris must face his reckoning at the hands of the British people > Mail On Sunday > https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-10406815/DAN-HODGES-Cummings-coup-brings-PM-wont-end-blood-letting.html

    The problem with the Hodges article is that he says no coup to remove the "democratically elected PM". But we don't elect the PM. So removing someone who is not elected is not a coup.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    Boris is going nowhere.

    As I said.

    But if he does this week, what about your credibility? Surely there is so much uncertainty this weekend, none of us can be so sure what happens next couple of days?

    The only thing we can be sure about is wether or not the letters are in tomorrow, the Assailant will still release something to keep up momentum Tuesday evening.

    What does nowhere mean anyway, you reckon he is in for 10 years? What is your take on exit date?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Only if you believe the spin that animals took capacity from humans (they didn't) or that they kept soldiers from escorting people (unlikely).
    I am not believing the spin. I have read the evidence given to the FAC. You haven't.
  • eek said:

    That changes does seem to imply that Hamilton won't be competing.

    It's possible because if the Mercedes isn't a 100% championship winner why bother when you have the titles don't need the money and while the 8th championship is missing 2021 will always have an asterisk beside it.
    I'd be surprised if he comes back. Why should he? Go out at the top, go do something else with your life. He'll still be around F1 I am certain of that. But as Vettel and Alonso have shown if you keep driving chasing that next title there is a real risk of growing disappointment.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,116
    kle4 said:

    Australia winning the series only 3-1 rather than the 5-0 their dominance deserves would be hilarious.
    I still think England will lose. But they have looked just about in the game in the last 2 tests after the humiliation of the first 3.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,288



    It has definitely reduced a lot now, with a quarter of youngsters being teetotal and many of the rest not wanting to make an arse of themselves on social media big factors.

    I've noticed that increasing numbers of my A-level students view conspicuous alcohol consumption as something done by chavs and degenerate boomers. Tobacco is utterly beyond the pale for them and at least half are vegetarian. There is hope...
  • Not sure that is right. I think offices started to ban alcohol and reduce boozy nights out more like 2010 than 2000. Around the millennium the big drinkers in my office might have 2-3 pints most lunchtimes, more on Fridays, and Friday evenings was unlimited paid for booze at the pub, which most people took as a means of starting getting pissed cheaply at least once a month.

    It has definitely reduced a lot now, with a quarter of youngsters being teetotal and many of the rest not wanting to make an arse of themselves on social media big factors.
    In the City and Fleet Street in the 1980s, alcohol flowed freely but all of the many building sites had become no drinking zones (health and safety gone mad).
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,192
    Foxy said:

    The reason that Johnson didn't back restrictions was because he knew they were not tenable in light of the partying that had already emerged.

    There were chaotic changes to travel rules, and while no formal ban on hospitality, encouragement for people to cancel and stay away. It wasn't just @Cyclefree Jr that had multiple cancellations. In practice was there much real difference in how busy things were on the other side of borders? And as nothing official, no compensation for those businesses.

    I also note an earlier comment from @Cookie decrying Plan B as unnecessary and the situations in Scotland and Wales, disastrous. Surely that is a false premise if a) the whole point of Plan B was to prevent the NHS from falling under a bus. As it stands the NHS appears to be teetering precariously on the kerbside. Would it have fallen over without Plan B? and b) Omicron was an unknown, so better to be safe than sorry. As it turned out Johnson's "wait and see" gamble worked for him, but the scientific evidence, now ridiculed on here was it could have gone the other way.

    As you suggest, the key was planning, certainty and authority from the politicians, and none were present because of circumstances they themselves had inadvertently engineered through their parties.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Highly relevant I think - like wound that can still ache. And explains some of us being so emotional about any return to lockdowns or lockdown lites.

    Pandemic loneliness: “Just because we’re not in lockdown anymore, doesn’t mean we’re not still lonely”

    https://www.stylist.co.uk/health/mental-health/lonely-after-lockdown-pandemic/607273?utm_source=pocket-newtab-global-en-GB
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,231
    Eabhal said:


    The key thing is how did Whitty etc present these models to Ministers?

    - This will happen
    - This will happen if you don't do anything
    - This will happen if you put our recommended restrictions in place
    - This will happen if the public don't do anything

    Another option for your list:
    - This isn't the most likely outcome, but it might happen with say 5-10% probability (so if the consequences are something you can't live with you'd better act...)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    DavidL said:

    I still think England will lose. But they have looked just about in the game in the last 2 tests after the humiliation of the first 3.
    When the highest score so far in the game is 303, 271 in the 4th looks tricky. Needs Root to get his mojo back.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Sandpit said:

    That was Gordon Brown, talking about Damien McBride, in about 2009 from memory.
    Well remembered! The tweet is in reply to one from Damien McBride!

    https://amp.theguardian.com/politics/2009/apr/16/gordon-brown-says-sorry-for-email-smears
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,116
    These lights are just too difficult for test cricket. Green is some bowler though.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Dura_Ace said:

    I've noticed that increasing numbers of my A-level students view conspicuous alcohol consumption as something done by chavs and degenerate boomers. Tobacco is utterly beyond the pale for them and at least half are vegetarian. There is hope...
    Weed?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    edited January 2022
    kle4 said:

    Wasn't for May.

    Granted who the hell wanted to take over in that period, but still.
    The papers are making that point this morning - getting the letters for May was easier, but getting her defeated in the vote more difficult. The view seems to be - based presumably on conversations with MPs holding the line in public but with a different view in private - that once(/if) Boris gets to a secret vote of MPs, he will lose.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,069
    edited January 2022
    IshmaelZ said:

    I am not believing the spin. I have read the evidence given to the FAC. You haven't.
    The Foreign Affairs Committee heard that the whole process was a right mess (with the FS sipping cocktails by a pool somewhere). Evidence that Britain would have rescued more people were it not for the animals is pretty thin. It's not like Rover and Fido were sitting on airline seats.
  • Collapso....
  • Poor Novax what a shame!
  • And England back down to again praying for miracle from Root and Stokes.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    IshmaelZ said:

    Kabul air lift seems pretty clear, and an act of great evil.
    It seems destined to perhaps be a historical mystery as to the extent of her true influence. But the circumstantial evidence cannot be ignored. The Kabul Air lift, and the fact that Johnson is unwilling to get any other advisors in - no one seems to want to go near the place. People will just select the narrative that reinforces their political views - if you are on the left/woke, it is almost certainly Boris's fault and criticism of Carrie is evidence of sexism; if you are sympathetic to the tories, then the problem is likely to be with Carrie and not Boris. As I said, it just seems to me like they are acting out a tragedy, going down together.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,673
    darkage said:

    I wouldn't bother. The return isn't brilliant, and there is a non trivial risk that he will resign in the next couple of weeks, albeit unlikely.

    Yes, essentially it requires that Sue Gray's report is absolutely damning (say 6-4 on) and that there is an avalanche of Tory MPs demanding his resignation (say 2-1 on if the report is damning) and that he gives up immediately without a fight (more than 3-1 against, if I read him correctly).

    If the question was "by June" then yes. Within two weeks? No.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082

    In the City and Fleet Street in the 1980s, alcohol flowed freely but all of the many building sites had become no drinking zones (health and safety gone mad).
    The drinking culture - rife in the early 1980s - disappeared quite suddenly in my public sector workplace in 1988, as best I remember. It all happened quite quickly and was remarkable at the time, particularly as the same thing was happening in lots of workplaces.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,192

    Well remembered! The tweet is in reply to one from Damien McBride!

    https://amp.theguardian.com/politics/2009/apr/16/gordon-brown-says-sorry-for-email-smears
    But the crucial difference here is there is photographic evidence Johnson was in the thick of the alleged wrongdoing.

    The evidence regarding the McBride emails is they were an arm's length away from Brown.
  • Dura_Ace said:

    I've noticed that increasing numbers of my A-level students view conspicuous alcohol consumption as something done by chavs and degenerate boomers. Tobacco is utterly beyond the pale for them and at least half are vegetarian. There is hope...
    I've never smoked, never drank, and I've been a veggie sine I was 16, over 30 years ago.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281

    Not sure that is right. I think offices started to ban alcohol and reduce boozy nights out more like 2010 than 2000. Around the millennium the big drinkers in my office might have 2-3 pints most lunchtimes, more on Fridays, and Friday evenings was unlimited paid for booze at the pub, which most people took as a means of starting getting pissed cheaply at least once a month.

    It has definitely reduced a lot now, with a quarter of youngsters being teetotal and many of the rest not wanting to make an arse of themselves on social media big factors.
    Different company ethos, evidently. Drinking at lunch time in 1980 was seen as a sign of a problem.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    The problem with the Hodges article is that he says no coup to remove the "democratically elected PM". But we don't elect the PM. So removing someone who is not elected is not a coup.
    It is generally accepted I think that while most people do not actually get to vote for a PM, a lot of votes are cast by people in constituencies on the basis they want it to be 'for Boris' or whomever, so while not a presidential system many MPs will succeed or fail on the basis of people seeking to vote 'for' the preferred PM.

    None of which has anything to do with removal of said PM by MPs. If you don't command confidence of the House you will be replaced, and you could not command confidence in several ways for several reasons. Unless every PM change without an election is a coup the word is a nonsense.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Yes, essentially it requires that Sue Gray's report is absolutely damning (say 6-4 on) and that there is an avalanche of Tory MPs demanding his resignation (say 2-1 on if the report is damning) and that he gives up immediately without a fight (more than 3-1 against, if I read him correctly).

    If the question was "by June" then yes. Within two weeks? No.
    If you want to back yes the odds aren't much different in the end March market
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    Cameron Green definitely the No 6 you want right now
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    IshmaelZ said:

    I am not believing the spin. I have read the evidence given to the FAC. You haven't.
    The fact that number ten lobbied for the animals pissing off the defence Secretary is definitely damaging, but other parts of that report is going to be very damaging too. The bit about various lists being kept, but in final analysis the overall shambles at this end in London left behind many who should have been higher priority.
This discussion has been closed.