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Boris Johnson is in diabolical — probably terminal — trouble after media reports, confirmed by No. 10, that his wife held a birthday party for him in 2020 during lockdown. He is denying reports that the party continued in his private flat later.
It’s yet another — by one count the 15th — Downing St party to have been held in breach of Johnson’s own COVID restrictions since the pandemic started, but the first time one has been acknowledged without an accompanying excuse by his office.
The position of the British prime minister — and serial liar — was already shaky ahead of the release of an independent inquiry into the apparently constant partying in his offices during lockdown, supposedly later this week.
Former Conservative party chair Baroness Sayeeda Warsi has called on Johnson to go, joining former senior minister David Davis and a growing list of Tory MPs, with open conflict between a decreasing group of pro-Johnson ministers and MPs who are enduring the wrath of the electorate over the hypocrisy of Johnson and his team.
The suggestion now is the only things that will save Johnson are a Russian invasion of Ukraine or the lack of a standout challenger for the job.
Johnson has long found political and personal success by cultivating the impression the rules don’t apply to him — an inveterate liar from his university days, a serial philanderer with an unclear but large number of children, a media figure who played politics as just another version of the celebrity game rather than a contest of public policy, a man whose lying could always be dismissed as the part of his public schoolboy charm.
Johnson doesn’t take himself seriously — why should anyone else, was the implication, even as he undermined prime minister after prime minister on his way to No. 10.
And yet gravity does finally seem to be sucking him back down to the political reality most other politicians exist in — and as with an overstretched rubber band, the fall has been very rapid.
One of the things accelerating it is that Johnson stands for nothing; any loyalty or following within his party and cabinet is purely personal and self-interested, not based on matters of greater substance like ideology, perceived competence or political smarts. For Johnson, there has never been any there- there — even his embrace of Brexit was purely opportunism — and the lack of substance will make the task of disposing of him all the easier.
The parallels between Johnson and Scott Morrison — the constant lying, the lack of substance, the careful curation of a confected personality, the routine incompetence, the rejection of any accountability — have always been uncanny, although in comparison with the Australian, Johnson at least has some basic education and some convictions around climate change.
The same risks that have ensnared Johnson also lie in wait for Morrison: Morrison is approaching the same kind of political territory as Johnson, where one more major mistake or significant lie could bring the whole show undone; he lacks any substance of the kind that might give his colleagues pause before disposing of him once the stench of political death sets in; loyalty to him is purely a matter of self-interest and convenience for his colleagues.
The big difference is that the Tories have a couple of years before facing the polls; the Liberals have less than four months. All the more reason why, if the end comes, it will come quickly, a house of lies collapsing in a political storm.
I really hope you are correct where Morrison is concerned. I’m not sure if Australia could withstand another 4 years under the liar’s yoke of Scommochio
Would that the ‘colourful’ promoter, Don King, organise a world championship bout between Johnson & Morrison to officially establish the better exponent of porky pies. The viewing audience would be massive & it would be the only time Morrison had my vote.
Scummo lies to hide his & his colleagues’ malfeasance – Bozo does it for fun.
In Johnson’s case, from the ample individual evidence, a background in media can do that to you.
So many, if they don’t go into politics directly, do it through the back-passage of “media advisor”, spouting BS through their (ventriloquist) dummy.
“Ouch!” said the media advisor.
“Wouldn’t I Lie To You”?
I think you would Scott
Set to music?
Not Annie Lennox – more Carmina Burana.
Both lightweight, dissembling buffoons, but Boris at least can be entertaining.
The notion that Johnson is entertaining is not universally agreed. It operates on the same level as the view that a certain Austrian corporal who went on to rise high in German politics (but must not be named for fear of the modbot) had a fine talent for conversation over lunches or dinners; so good that a collection of his Table Talk was transcribed and published.
Lightweight is not the right word for Johnson. He has been very useful and effective as a front for forces doing huge damage to the UK. If he can no longer deliver they will replace him and continue their project. That’s the real problem for the UK. Johnson may go but, except for the number of parties held in No. 10, nothing will change.
Hitler’s table Talk was recorded once he was powerful and published because it gave insights into his thinking, not because his rambling monologues were interesting in themselves.
I don’t know. The sight of a smiling Morrison next to Grace Tame, so stony faced that she would drill holes through his chest if he turned to face her, I found rather entertaining.
Boris Johnson, the joke that’s just not funny anymore
John and Morris have a lot to answer for with regard to their sons’ behaviour.
“All the more reason why, if the end comes, it will come quickly, a house of lies collapsing in a political storm.”
It’s not quite so obviously stinking bad as Johnson’s series of parties in No. 10, but today’s news that our Aged Care Minister Richard Colbeck was actually watching an Ashes Test Match in Hobart when he said he was far too busy fighting the Omicron outbreak to spare any time for the parliamentary covid committee shows a similar grasp of priorities. Not of course that anyone really thinks the Morrison Gang gives a damn about the aged anyway.
‘Arrogant complacency’ a phrase mentioned by Katy Gallagher this morning that pretty well sums up this current Federal Government!
I think smug complacency is a hair better