Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

How the papers are Johnson and Sunak’s lockdown fines – politicalbetting.com

2456

Comments

  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Nigelb said:

    Presidents of 🇵🇱🇱🇹🇱🇻🇪🇪 on their way to #Kyiv to show support to #Ukraine and
    @zelensky

    https://mobile.twitter.com/JakubKumoch/status/1514098241201217542

    FWIW, I noticed that all of those celebrating Boris' bravery in visiting Kyiv completely ignored the Lithuanian PM's visit to Borodianka when I posted it yesterday.

    It's part of the job. We don't congratulate the Armed Forces for simply turning up to a theatre of war.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,268
    BTW, just a little comment. We went down to London by train yesterday, setting off just after ten from St Neots. Train down was fairly busy; the one returning just after five was very busy. Two adults and child; £53 for a turn-up return fare. Felt fairly good value to me.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    Scott_xP said:

    That's a different proposition.

    BoZo might well walk away
    So you aren't prepared to take the risk? Your "Johnson will be have to be dragged out of Downing Street" rings rather hollow now....
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,048

    the brexit realignment seems to have put to bed for once and for all the idea that the tories are ruthless at changing leader

    Or that they have any respect for the rule of law
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,048

    So you aren't prepared to take the risk?

    I am not willing to bet that BoZo won't jump if it looks to be in his interest.

    I don't think the Tory cult will bin him.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,523

    Corbyn is in a different league of unacceptability and he is rejected by far more than the right, unless you think Starmer is on the right
    You and I are never going to agree about Corbyn, of course. However, I would rather have had hime, with all his baggage, as PM than Johnson.
    The nation was offered a poor choice in both 2017 and 2019.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,451
    Good morning, everyone.

    Suppose we either get a new, bad, variant, or a different disease (remember we've also had avian flu, swine flu, and SARS in recent history) that's bad.

    And then the PM has to tell people to stay at home.

    How much moral authority will that plea have from this man?
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    My MP, Big_G_WestDevon as I think of him, has been saying Let's wait for Gray. I must write to him again to see if he is still saying that. The issue and payment of FPNs surely makes any further report redundant?
  • You and I are never going to agree about Corbyn, of course. However, I would rather have had hime, with all his baggage, as PM than Johnson.
    The nation was offered a poor choice in both 2017 and 2019.
    Really - are you saying you would rather have Corbyn dealing with war in Ukraine?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,122
    Nigelb said:

    The RCN writes to one of Johnson's backbench fans.
    https://mobile.twitter.com/theRCN/status/1513942912840704008
    Our General Secretary and Chief Executive @patcullen9 has written to @Mike_Fabricant over his comments today on nurses drinking in staff rooms during #COVID19.

    In my Trust we were banned from shared food during the lockdowns. Everyone had to provide their own and eat alone. Consuming alcohol on the premeses would have been a serious disciplinary offence.

    We all know that Johnson and co are liars, though some seem curiously unbothered about it.

    @ozymandias is right though about concentrating on policy in the campaign. Everyone knows Johnsons bad character, its his bad policies that need the scrutiny.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    I really think that once Sue Gray's report is published and any number of embarrassing photographs appear Boris will be gone one way or another

    You still think Phatboi is capable of feeling embarrassed?
  • IshmaelZ said:

    My MP, Big_G_WestDevon as I think of him, has been saying Let's wait for Gray. I must write to him again to see if he is still saying that. The issue and payment of FPNs surely makes any further report redundant?

    I think Sue Gray's report will be so embarrassing and accompanied by any number of compromising photos will see him either resign or be removed
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,523
    edited April 2022

    Really - are you saying you would rather have Corbyn dealing with war in Ukraine?
    TBH, I'm not aware of any statements he has made about Ukraine. Has he made any?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445
    Dura_Ace said:

    Part of the excellent performance by the Ukraine forces against armour is due to incredibly profligate expenditure of weapons; they are firing off hundreds of ATGMs every day.

    No other armed forces that weren't a) in an existential struggle for survival and b) were getting them all gratis would expend them at that rate.

    But you're correct to observe that's there's a limit and they are probably going to run NATO dry quite soon.
    The rate of expenditure is also because their supplies of other kit - notably artillery and ground attack aircraft - have been very limited.

    'No other armed forces' isn't entirely correct, since Russia seems to have run through its medium range missiles at an unsustainable rate, too. Not to mention its tanks.

    And there are very large stocks of NATO artillery ammo, and medium range AA missiles, which have not been sent to Ukraine.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,475
    Fishing said:

    Nope.

    If he'd done 25 in a 20 mph zone I wouldn't think he should go either.

    It's a trivial law that never should have been there in the first place and isn't even a law any more. I broke it all the time when it was in force.

    If he'd robbed a bank he definitely should.

    Somewhere between those two is a line. Not sure exactly where.
    You aren't worried about the lying or misleading of parliament or the people then?

  • IshmaelZ said:

    You still think Phatboi is capable of feeling embarrassed?
    Absolutely not but his mps are a different matter
  • TBH, I'm not aware of any statements he has made about Ukraine. Has he made any?
    He would have invited Putin to no 10
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,268

    You and I are never going to agree about Corbyn, of course. However, I would rather have had hime, with all his baggage, as PM than Johnson.
    The nation was offered a poor choice in both 2017 and 2019.
    Do you honestly believe Corbyn would have dealt with the Covid and Ukraine crises better than Johnson? He has been wrong on both issues: he won't even say whether he has had the vaccine (and that's really important in encouraging people to come forward), and he signed Stop The War's mid-bendingly stupid statement about the Ukrainian war.

    So whilst Johnson isn't good, and I did not vote for him, I would much rather have him dealing with these external issues than Corbyn, McDonnell and their followers.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Pretty much everyone who matters (except Priti Patel) has now done the two-handed salute thing;

    https://news.sky.com/story/boris-johnson-rishi-sunak-parties-partygate-news-latest-live-updates-downing-street-fines-12578314?postid=3716251#liveblog-body

    Cult leaders get away with all sorts of bad stuff, because they... lead cults.
    And Braverman. Not because there's any chance of her living up to her name, but her job puts her in an awkward position
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445
    IshmaelZ said:

    It's part of the job. We don't congratulate the Armed Forces for simply turning up to a theatre of war.
    I don't disagree.
    If only everyone were so consistent.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445

    Absolutely not but his mps are a different matter
    Evidently not very many of them.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,268

    TBH, I'm not aware of any statements he has made about Ukraine. Has he made any?
    Just read STW's stupid statement on the Ukrainian conflict. A statement that spends one paragraph talking about the war, and the rest talking about how it is all our fault.

    And which ends with the following:
    "We urge the entire anti-war movement to unite on the basis of challenging the British government’s aggressive posturing and direct its campaigning to that end above all."

    No call on Russia to withdraw. To these traitorous fuckwits, it is our fault.

    And look at the first name at the bottom...

    https://www.stopwar.org.uk/article/list-of-signatories-stop-the-war-statement-on-the-crisis-over-ukraine/
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,481
    edited April 2022

    You aren't worried about the lying or misleading of parliament or the people then?

    Sure, but he's lied numerous times before and he hasn't resigned or been fired. As have numerous other politicians, including Starmer. So, again, I think it's worrying, but not sufficient for him to resign. If I were his boss, I might give him a verbal warning for it, not sack him, if that analogy makes sense.

    Raising taxes when he explicitly said he wouldn't, on the other hand, I think is sufficient for him to resign. It's a lie that actually matters to people, rather than one about whether he attended a party in his own garden, which doesn't. But he didn't resign, and few seriously called on him to do so iirc.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,689
    On twitter Robert Colvile is rightfully pointing out that Bozo and Sunak have been fined for the birthday cake that they didn't even know about.

    Which is such a low bar and so early on in the history of parties that there could still be a lot of fines still to come.

    Boris may have survived the first FPN but can he survive a second one or a fifth?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,037
    edited April 2022

    Corbyn is in a different league of unacceptability and he is rejected by far more than the right, unless you think Starmer is on the right
    Exactly. Here is the warmonger Corbyn in 2018 calling for sanctions against Russia.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-43380217
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,724

    Just read STW's stupid statement on the Ukrainian conflict. A statement that spends one paragraph talking about the war, and the rest talking about how it is all our fault.

    And which ends with the following:
    "We urge the entire anti-war movement to unite on the basis of challenging the British government’s aggressive posturing and direct its campaigning to that end above all."

    No call on Russia to withdraw. To these traitorous fuckwits, it is our fault.

    And look at the first name at the bottom...

    https://www.stopwar.org.uk/article/list-of-signatories-stop-the-war-statement-on-the-crisis-over-ukraine/
    I hate STW (aka the SWP rebadged for people who shop at Waitrose) but this is out of date - the statement you link to is dated 18 February. The war began (or at least it’s current incarnation started) on 24 February. So it’s not perhaps surprising that there is not much space devoted to the Russian occupation.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,689

    You and I are never going to agree about Corbyn, of course. However, I would rather have had hime, with all his baggage, as PM than Johnson.
    The nation was offered a poor choice in both 2017 and 2019.
    Our choices are always going to be poor because with 24/7 news and social media anyone sane is not going to go into politics. And a lot of people that might want to are destroyed by historic poorly formed or just poor social media posts.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,122

    He would have invited Putin to no 10
    Not sure about that, but Blair did.

    This is Corbyns most recent tweet on the subject:

    https://twitter.com/jeremycorbyn/status/1511000514292600833?t=QnsFg7bVw9nBE0ZEkk_qhg&s=19

    The horrific discovery of mass graves in Bucha must be investigated and those responsible held accountable.

    There must be an urgent and immediate ceasefire in Ukraine to end the bloodshed that has already taken so many lives. https://t.co/E6xsvPtqaj
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,523

    Just read STW's stupid statement on the Ukrainian conflict. A statement that spends one paragraph talking about the war, and the rest talking about how it is all our fault.

    And which ends with the following:
    "We urge the entire anti-war movement to unite on the basis of challenging the British government’s aggressive posturing and direct its campaigning to that end above all."

    No call on Russia to withdraw. To these traitorous fuckwits, it is our fault.

    And look at the first name at the bottom...

    https://www.stopwar.org.uk/article/list-of-signatories-stop-the-war-statement-on-the-crisis-over-ukraine/
    I think you're going a bit over the top, but I personally would be very, very chary about associating with anything that Claudia Webbe was.
    One has to be careful about being wise after the event, but one cannot say that Ukraine has always been whiter than white.
    However, there's no doubt whatsoever that the Russian state and particularly the Russian army has behaved appallingly.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025

    If a cabinet minister broke ranks and resigned, then that would be a big moment
    Fat chance these crooks vote with their wallets and are as big liars as Bozo
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,455
    I love the ad for tinned peas on the front page of the Mail.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,122
    Dura_Ace said:

    Part of the excellent performance by the Ukraine forces against armour is due to incredibly profligate expenditure of weapons; they are firing off hundreds of ATGMs every day.

    No other armed forces that weren't a) in an existential struggle for survival and b) were getting them all gratis would expend them at that rate.

    But you're correct to observe that's there's a limit and they are probably going to run NATO dry quite soon.
    Where do you get the figure that they are firing off hundreds per day? Or do you count RPGs?

    If they were firing that number, and knocking out a handful of tanks each day, it would be a problem, but I suspect the effectiveness to be rather better than that.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    Scott_xP said:

    I am not willing to bet that BoZo won't jump if it looks to be in his interest.

    I don't think the Tory cult will bin him.
    Boris "resigning" is the fig leaf that he gets to use to leave Downing Street before the election. So he doesn't face the humiliation of getting pushed out by his MPs.

    Your currency just got seriously debased.

    1 million Scott_P retweets < 1 gold sovereign
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    edited April 2022
    Scott_xP said:

    I am not willing to bet that BoZo won't jump if it looks to be in his interest.

    I don't think the Tory cult will bin him.
    Make it void if he jumps then
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    edited April 2022
    Every one who has put their name to that STW statement is a traitor.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,323

    Corbyn might be mistaken, but, AFAIK, he is not dishonest. Indeed, it's his honesty about his views which get's him into bother with the Right.
    ‘I was present, but I don’t think I was involved’ waves hello.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,939
    Heathener said:

    Really interesting Stuart.

    Assuming Labour can't win outright in GE2024 (they might) and assuming they don't have enough for power with the LibDems alone then an agreement with the SNP at Westminster would be fascinating. It would make the SNP's life a lot easier if they didn't have to fight in the courts to get indyref2 so there's a lot in it for them and I'm fairly sure the two parties could agree to work together, but on the question of independence campaign as free agents. That wouldn't be the first time pragmatism like that has happened.

    I don't really understand to be honest why Labour and the LibDems are officially so unionist.

    Let Scotland have another vote and decide for themselves! What's wrong with being democratic?
    Good question. And they might go for Ref2 as a policy. It may gain votes and perhaps not lose a lot.

    The case for status quo unionism is thin, and has been for years. In a secular age there is no decent case for the island of Ireland not being unified, and Brexit amplifies this. But the Ireland border problem emphasises how difficult the Scottish/English border problem would be if it became an EU border. (I can see Scotland from where I live so am biased, but it is still objectively true).

    The border, currency and economy issues make it impossible (IMHO) that a Ref2 can be won by the Nats. But it would be a lengthy and divisive distraction.

    Tactically (and I want Labour to lead the next government, I thing I have not wanted for decades) allowing Ref2 would probably be the best policy, on the private basis that it coud not win, especially if Labour were in power.

    And after RefBrexit obvs nothing could possibly go wrong.

  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025

    Really - are you saying you would rather have Corbyn dealing with war in Ukraine?
    Yes I would in a heartbeat. Boris is doing f all other than letting weapons be sent over, a child could do that.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,048
    Grant Shapps giving an amazingly bad interview on Radio4 just now re partygate.

    Actually getting dizzy listening to @grantshapps being interviewed by @bbcnickrobinson on @BBCRadio4 #Partygatefines
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,389

    The most ridiculous thing about that ridiculous Daily Mail front page is the claim that Johnson ate a salad at the party. As if!

    That said, if there was food to eat it was not an impromptu gathering, was it?

    The odd thing about the Mail headline if it was intended to shore up the PM is that it's so cack-handed. The reason PR companies advise a fullsome apology at the first whiff of trouble is because it works

    The alternatives 'It wasn't me guv' or cringe worthy excuses were ditched years ago as they give the story legs and remove sympathy
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,523
    edited April 2022
    ydoethur said:

    ‘I was present, but I don’t think I was involved’ waves hello.
    LOL. Point taken. On a par with 'there wasn't a party'!
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited April 2022
    Dura_Ace said:

    Part of the excellent performance by the Ukraine forces against armour is due to incredibly profligate expenditure of weapons; they are firing off hundreds of ATGMs every day.

    No other armed forces that weren't a) in an existential struggle for survival and b) were getting them all gratis would expend them at that rate.

    But you're correct to observe that's there's a limit and they are probably going to run NATO dry quite soon.
    Pre-Granby the Milan allocation was one missile per pl member per year.

    On Granby pre-deployment 30-40 per day were fired per platoon.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025

    He would have invited Putin to no 10
    Rather than taking his money for years as Boris and Tories have been doing
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445

    This is a meaning of the term 'trivial' with which I am unfamiliar.

    As I understand it, the laws were framed to save lives and prevent the NHS from collapsing. These were trivial objectives?

    Tell me more.
    I'll ask my mother, who was unable to say goodbye to her husband of six decades.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,901
    Has anyone told Tory MP's that we aren't actually at War?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Roger said:

    The odd thing about the Mail headline if it was intended to shore up the PM is that it's so cack-handed. The reason PR companies advise a fullsome apology at the first whiff of trouble is because it works

    The alternatives 'It wasn't me guv' or cringe worthy excuses were ditched years ago as they give the story legs and remove sympathy
    I had to look at the Mail front twice - my initial reaction was that it was taking the piss, as some of it could be off the next Eye front page. Always a bad sign when one can't instantly tell satire from reality.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,323
    Foxy said:

    Not sure about that, but Blair did.

    This is Corbyns most recent tweet on the subject:

    https://twitter.com/jeremycorbyn/status/1511000514292600833?t=QnsFg7bVw9nBE0ZEkk_qhg&s=19

    The horrific discovery of mass graves in Bucha must be investigated and those responsible held accountable.

    There must be an urgent and immediate ceasefire in Ukraine to end the bloodshed that has already taken so many lives. https://t.co/E6xsvPtqaj
    That’s still ambiguous. He’s saying ‘those responsible’ and even Lavrov has said that.

    The point he needs to make is that ‘those responsible’ were Russian soldiers there on the orders of his admirees in the Russian government.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,901
    tlg86 said:

    Every one who has put their name to that STW statement is a traitor.

    The right to express contrary and unpopular opinions is one of our great strengths.
    A distinct advantage we have over Russia.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445
    malcolmg said:

    Yes I would in a heartbeat. Boris is doing f all other than letting weapons be sent over, a child could do that.
    And Corbyn would likely have prevented it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    As for Boris, I'm with @Fishing - of all the things to get rid of him for this seems at the more trivial end. But then I'm a sucker for a crooked tie and those hang dog eyes. I can't rouse myself to get outraged by him having a birthday cake on his birthday at the office (yes and I know many thousands couldn't go to the funeral of their loved ones) but then perhaps that's just because I thought those laws were absurd and didn't follow them all myself so it just seems like sensible behaviour.

    I think also @MarqueeMark had it right in his post. He defeated Corbyn, he did get Brexit done, which is what he was elected to do, and then he lied and broke the law and hence he should go. Not sure the mechanism, that said. Perhaps the voters in 2024 and @MM I will absolutely take your bet that he will be there at that time leading the Cons. A fiver to the other's favourite charity.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Tories really have hyped Corbyn up to be some sort of supervillain. It’s helps them soothe their conscience and avoid dealing with the fact they stuck Boris in number 10 and went a bit UKIPy. Today the Tories are basically as extreme as what they criticise. Just in a different direction and arguably more so than Corbyn on key points, who in many ways was very conservative.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    That’s still ambiguous. He’s saying ‘those responsible’ and even Lavrov has said that.

    The point he needs to make is that ‘those responsible’ were Russian soldiers there on the orders of his admirees in the Russian government.
    What is all this about Corbyn and using him as an excuse for law-breakers and incompetents? It's not as if he is actually the alternative to Mr J, is he? He's not even a Labour MP. This is like saying vote Tory in case you get Jo Swinson or Michael Foot.
  • Fishing said:

    Nope.

    If he'd done 25 in a 20 mph zone I wouldn't think he should go either.

    It's a trivial law that never should have been there in the first place and isn't even a law any more. I broke it all the time when it was in force.

    If he'd robbed a bank he definitely should.

    Somewhere between those two is a line. Not sure exactly where.
    The point is that he wrote the bloody law!
  • This is getting tiresome now. Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on. It will be forgotten again when the Tories end up level pegging with Labour in the local elections and then all the heat will be on Starmer.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Roger said:

    The odd thing about the Mail headline if it was intended to shore up the PM is that it's so cack-handed. The reason PR companies advise a fullsome apology at the first whiff of trouble is because it works

    The alternatives 'It wasn't me guv' or cringe worthy excuses were ditched years ago as they give the story legs and remove sympathy
    "I couldn't have been at the party as I was caught on CCTV running over an old lady in my 4x4 at the time in question."
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    Nigelb said:

    And Corbyn would likely have prevented it.
    Speculation nigel, not that I had any regard for Corbyn
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    This is getting tiresome now. Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on. It will be forgotten again when the Tories end up level pegging with Labour in the local elections and then all the heat will be on Starmer.

    Have you polled them? I am getting angrier
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,323
    Scott_xP said:

    Grant Shapps giving an amazingly bad interview on Radio4 just now re partygate.

    Actually getting dizzy listening to @grantshapps being interviewed by @bbcnickrobinson on @BBCRadio4 #Partygatefines

    The amazing thing would be if Shapps gave a good interview.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,689

    This is getting tiresome now. Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on. It will be forgotten again when the Tories end up level pegging with Labour in the local elections and then all the heat will be on Starmer.

    The local elections are in 3 weeks time and I suspect there will be at least one more round of FPN including another for Boris...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,323
    Carnyx said:

    What is all this about Corbyn and using him as an excuse for law-breakers and incompetents? It's not as if he is actually the alternative to Mr J, is he? He's not even a Labour MP. This is like saying vote Tory in case you get Jo Swinson or Michael Foot.
    Hey, I’m hardly using him as an excuse. I’m just pointing out he’s not honest and he’s alarmingly pro-Russian.

    That doesn’t mean Johnson shouldn’t go. He should have gone yesterday (arguably a lot sooner).
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    Hey, I’m hardly using him as an excuse. I’m just pointing out he’s not honest and he’s alarmingly pro-Russian.

    That doesn’t mean Johnson shouldn’t go. He should have gone yesterday (arguably a lot sooner).
    Sorry, was commenting as much on the widerr sentiment on PB passim as anything else. Apols.

    BTW has nobody commented on the DT front page? It's rather wimpish. Neither fish nor fowl.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-61088948
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,901
    edited April 2022

    This is getting tiresome now. Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on. It will be forgotten again when the Tories end up level pegging with Labour in the local elections and then all the heat will be on Starmer.

    I suspect you may be correct until the final seven words.
    A no score draw in May is where I am leaning. With some wild local swings for each to point to
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    He did the job. Kept Corbyn out of power with an 80 seat majority - smashed him to the point where that strand of political thinking that so nearly took hold is now only espoused by a handful of proponents. And them, like Corbyn, now outside the Labour Party. (The silenced STOP THE WAR Coalition over Ukraine is especially pleasing, given how galling it must be for Soviet fan-bois to have to suck up. Still, a bit difficult when they have been on a Red Army-style orgy of raping, looting and pillaging. The poster boy for Russian Armed Forces is now captioned: WANTED FOR PAEDO-RAPE AND MURDER.

    He did the job of getting Brexit through a previously stalemated political establishment.

    He did the job of getting England through an upper-quartile outcome on Covid.

    Now time to turf him out before the next election. Use him and abuse him, as he would one of his romantic dalliances. He has served his purpose; onwards and upwards. He could hardly complain.

    And turf him out before the next election those Conservative MPs otherwise consigned to the dole inevitably will.

    Except they won’t.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited April 2022
    Just had a look at the comments on the Mail. The massively best rated are hostile to Mr J (complaints re cheating, lies, not actually at war, pretend Churchill (and someone has spotted the logical implication there re Chamberlain), etc), the worst rated ones are in support (opposition leaders being malicious to poor Mr J, leave him alone cos of the war, other people did it etc.)
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    Except they won’t.
    The key point is that Boris is safe until they find a replacement. Right now there isn’t one and Boris is adept at killing rivals careers. He knows all the tricks, he wrote the book. Boris is safe for now.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Except they won’t.
    I tend to agree. They are elected representatives and might well decide to keep Boris in place and let's not forget Boris is a huge electoral operator.

    If they do then that's fine - it will be the will of the people. And the people can cast their vote in 2024 to make their preferences known.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,408
    eek said:

    The local elections are in 3 weeks time and I suspect there will be at least one more round of FPN including another for Boris...
    Rumour is that Sue Grey will make an appearance just before postal ballots go out.

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,408

    The point is that he wrote the bloody law!
    What if he was caught speeding six times in one year?

    Which seems to be where we are with known Johnson attendances at Lockdown parties.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Jonathan said:

    Tories really have hyped Corbyn up to be some sort of supervillain. It’s helps them soothe their conscience and avoid dealing with the fact they stuck Boris in number 10 and went a bit UKIPy. Today the Tories are basically as extreme as what they criticise. Just in a different direction and arguably more so than Corbyn on key points, who in many ways was very conservative.

    It's an interesting phenomenon.

    I am by no means a fan of Corbyn and I am, in all honesty, glad he is not prime minister at a time when Ukraine needed immediate and wholehearted military assistance (PM Corbyn's principles would have made it very hard for him to act promptly and without caveats).

    And his hangers-on were at least as mediocre as the current mob.

    But if you look at his actual policies they were not especially radical - certainly by comparison with Blair and Cameron I. Even the much derided headline grabbers were in fact quite practical measures that future governments of any complexion could consider. I'm thinking of aspects of the energy and environmental policy; or the sops to trade union "involvement" - which to be fair were balanced by sops to business too; and far from the "fuck business" attitude of the current Government

    The issue is that the window has moved so far to the right that those policies *look* radical.

    As I say, I didn't vote for him. And I probably wouldn't again despite everything we've seen since, but he was remarkably cautious for a "once in a generation" left-wing leader of a major party.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,323

    It's not just a question of the law.

    It is about a public duty to set an example.

    The Queen didn't sit alone simply because it was the law. She did it because she felt she should set an example and that was her honourable duty. Like her father during the War.

    Johnson and co have no concept of the word.
    I was once asked what would happen if the Queen broke the law.

    I said she would have to give up the throne, like her uncle.

    But, I added, because of who she is, what she is and how she sees her role, she would never do it.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,672

    Why not?

    Once you establish the principle that an FPN is no big deal, and that it's OK to mislead Parliament, five is no big deal either. Five times nothing is still nothing. There's no threshold where two parties are OK, but three aren't.

    If he's still there in 2024, the opposition campaign writes itself, but unless the Conservative backbenchers find a spine they were selected not to have, they go down with the good ship Bozza.

    It's the local council candidates I feel sorry for.
    It's a sad truth that most MPs don't really care much about council candidates - they wish them well and all that, happy to do a little canvassing with them now and then, but they're out there with preservation of canals and preventing metorite strikes - very important, of course, but not front of mind.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,479

    This is getting tiresome now. Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on. It will be forgotten again when the Tories end up level pegging with Labour in the local elections and then all the heat will be on Starmer.

    I suspect when you have your performance review by CCHQ they may suggest your posts lack imagination.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    ydoethur said:

    I was once asked what would happen if the Queen broke the law.

    I said she would have to give up the throne, like her uncle.

    But, I added, because of who she is, what she is and how she sees her role, she would never do it.
    Would that include being done for speeding?
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    algarkirk said:

    Good question. And they might go for Ref2 as a policy. It may gain votes and perhaps not lose a lot.

    The case for status quo unionism is thin, and has been for years. In a secular age there is no decent case for the island of Ireland not being unified, and Brexit amplifies this. But the Ireland border problem emphasises how difficult the Scottish/English border problem would be if it became an EU border. (I can see Scotland from where I live so am biased, but it is still objectively true).

    The border, currency and economy issues make it impossible (IMHO) that a Ref2 can be won by the Nats. But it would be a lengthy and divisive distraction.

    Tactically (and I want Labour to lead the next government, I thing I have not wanted for decades) allowing Ref2 would probably be the best policy, on the private basis that it coud not win, especially if Labour were in power.

    And after RefBrexit obvs nothing could possibly go wrong.

    Ok then, your scenario:

    Outcome next UK GE: NOM and PM Starmer

    Starmer “allows” (your word) IndyRef2

    No wins again because Scotland are an economic basket case, the Irish are crap and the new Labour-led minority government in London is competent, effective and popular.

    It doesn’t take a genius to spot the flaw.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,389
    Sending hundreds of weapons to Ukraine seems to be doing nothing but feeding the fire. There seems to be only one thing that makes a country secure and that is ownership of a nuclear weapon. If 'The West' want to deter Russia's invasion give Ukraine the ultimate deterrant. Ten nuclear warheads with instructions.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    edited April 2022
    dixiedean said:

    I suspect you may be correct until the final seven words.
    A no score draw in May is where I am leaning. With some wild local swings for each to point to
    "Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on." - most normal [as opposed to activist/engaged] Conservative voters aren't happy (according to the polling yesterday). That makes them more likely to stay at home.

    Most normal Labour voters are angry at the government. Which encourages them to pop along to the ballot box and give them a gentle kicking on the way to work. I don't see how this translates into your Local Election scenario.

    (Apologies @dixiedean - obviously I am replying one message upthread!)
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,445
    malcolmg said:

    Speculation nigel, not that I had any regard for Corbyn
    Hence 'likely', malcolm - I think it's a reasonable prediction.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,408
    Starmer needs to ask Johnson at next PMQ why Matt Hancock had to resign.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    TOPPING said:

    As for Boris, I'm with @Fishing - of all the things to get rid of him for this seems at the more trivial end. But then I'm a sucker for a crooked tie and those hang dog eyes. I can't rouse myself to get outraged by him having a birthday cake on his birthday at the office (yes and I know many thousands couldn't go to the funeral of their loved ones) but then perhaps that's just because I thought those laws were absurd and didn't follow them all myself so it just seems like sensible behaviour.

    I think also @MarqueeMark had it right in his post. He defeated Corbyn, he did get Brexit done, which is what he was elected to do, and then he lied and broke the law and hence he should go. Not sure the mechanism, that said. Perhaps the voters in 2024 and @MM I will absolutely take your bet that he will be there at that time leading the Cons. A fiver to the other's favourite charity.

    You're on. £5 from the loser to the winner's charity of choice. The bet: MarqueeMark says Boris Johnson will not lead the Conservatives into the next general election. Topping that he will.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    dixiedean said:

    The right to express contrary and unpopular opinions is one of our great strengths.
    A distinct advantage we have over Russia.
    Yep, and we can call them out for what they are.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,408
    Neither is it true that the fine is comparable to a speeding ticket, or past occasions when ministers did not resign after being fined. The PM imposed these extraordinary laws, implored us to abide by them, broke them himself, and then lied about doing so. Neither is it right to argue that the fine does not confirm guilt: in paying the fine and not challenging it the PM is accepting the verdict of the police.

    Nick Timothy - DT
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    tlg86 said:

    Would that include being done for speeding?
    Regina non potest peccare.

    In practice I don't believe she drives on public roads to prevent exactly this kind of issue arising
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    mwadams said:

    "Most normal Conservative voters are desperate to move on." - most normal [as opposed to activist/engaged] Conservative voters aren't happy (according to the polling yesterday). That makes them more likely to stay at home.

    Most normal Labour voters are angry at the government. Which encourages them to pop along to the ballot box and give them a gentle kicking on the way to work. I don't see how this translates into your Local Election scenario.
    As I noted a moment ago, the Mail Online comments are v. hostile to Mr J. Which supports your scenario ...
  • eek said:

    The local elections are in 3 weeks time and I suspect there will be at least one more round of FPN including another for Boris...
    I really would not want to be a conservative candidate in this situation
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,475

    Ok then, your scenario:

    Outcome next UK GE: NOM and PM Starmer

    Starmer “allows” (your word) IndyRef2

    No wins again because Scotland are an economic basket case, the Irish are crap and the new Labour-led minority government in London is competent, effective and popular.

    It doesn’t take a genius to spot the flaw.
    Why do you think Scotland is an economic basket case? Which Irish are Crap? (your words not mine).
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    IshmaelZ said:

    Regina non potest peccare.

    In practice I don't believe she drives on public roads to prevent exactly this kind of issue arising
    I suspect that's right.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,475
    tlg86 said:

    Would that include being done for speeding?
    The Queen can't break the law, it's her law.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    The Queen can't break the law, it's her law.
    R vs. R
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    ,

    Good morning, everyone.

    Suppose we either get a new, bad, variant, or a different disease (remember we've also had avian flu, swine flu, and SARS in recent history) that's bad.

    And then the PM has to tell people to stay at home.

    How much moral authority will that plea have from this man?

    Sounds a great reason to keep Boris as PM for life to me. When the history is written, there’s a good chance that the adoption of lockdown policies will be seen as the biggest policy error by the developed world since 1914.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    You're on. £5 from the loser to the winner's charity of choice. The bet: MarqueeMark says Boris Johnson will not lead the Conservatives into the next general election. Topping that he will.
    Sounds good. It's a good emotional hedge for me as I think he should go before then just I can't see it happening.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,001
    Roger said:

    Sending hundreds of weapons to Ukraine seems to be doing nothing but feeding the fire. There seems to be only one thing that makes a country secure and that is ownership of a nuclear weapon. If 'The West' want to deter Russia's invasion give Ukraine the ultimate deterrant. Ten nuclear warheads with instructions.

    "with instructions" - very good.
    The pictures-without-words in the manner of Ikea instructions would be called for. First you have to count up the components then lay out a mat for the assembly.
This discussion has been closed.