Cycling through central Cambridge on my way to work this morning, via Castle St, Bridge St, St John’s St, Trinity Street, St Mary’s St, Sidney St. I counted at least 14 empty shop units. Don Pasquale restaurant in Market Square, been there 30+ years: closed, boarded up. More will
follow as Lockdown 2 denies shops & restaurants their most lucrative months’ trading, pushing them into bankruptcy. The Tories under Johnson killed the High Street. “Surely it was Covid19?” I hear you ask. “No one could have seen this coming; it’s unprecedented”. When this is
over, if it’s ever really over, we mustn’t fall for the lie that nobody saw it coming, that Govt did its best in difficult circumstances. Tories were in power for 9 years before Covid struck. They were warned of an impending pandemic & failed to prepare, so wrapped up were they
with their Brexit project. When it happened they were far too slow to act, hampered by a toxic combination of arrogant exceptionalism & a refusal to believe inconvenient truths offered by the hated experts. Too late, then far too little, because they believed wrongly the public
wouldn’t comply. Then the incompetence kicked in & the consequences of appointing a cabinet based on loyalty & belief in Brexit rather than ability became apparent. Too slow to lock down, then Cummings drove a cart & horses all the way to Barnard Castle & destroyed the fragile
national mood of solidarity & it all began to unravel. Govt poured petrol on the flames by unlocking too soon & in a way that confused & angered almost everyone. Policy handbrake turns became a daily occurrence. Covid got its second wind & Johnson dithered & delayed all over
again, with no doubt similar consequences. The High Street, already wounded, went into intensive care. The signs are not promising. Meanwhile Amazon & the big online players are thriving. When you walk down your local High Street, despairing at boarded up properties & To Let
signs, remember who allowed this to happen, through sheer incompetence and carelessness. And reflect on the fact that the government that brought you Serco Test & Trace (the worst & most expensive in the world - guaranteed) & gave £Million contracts to their mates without
competition, are walking the country to a no-deal or crap deal Brexit, which will pile agony upon agonies. It’s a perfect shit storm of incompetence and corruption presided over by the laziest, most talentless PM we have seen in our lifetimes. Predictable & predicted.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
FWIW I don’t hate Jeremy Corbyn, and I think most people who support him support him for the right reasons. I supported most of his domestic agenda, and I admired his courage and principle in saying he would not use nuclear weapons under any circumstances, but he didn’t explain
his position very well, as with so many issues, and he came across in interviews as thin-skinned, tetchy and defensive. His major failings were on Brexit, because we all knew that he was a lifelong opponent of the EU and his less than half-hearted support of Remain in the
Referendum was totally unconvincing. He refused to question the validity of the referendum, even when it became clear that Leave had engaged in serious illegality, and went AWOL for long periods from 2016-19. He totally ignored the overwhelming public support for a second
Corbyn wasn’t committed to remaining in the EU in the referendum in 2016 “I’d give it 7 out of 10”. He suggested invoking Article 50 the day after the result. He was invisible in the Brexit debate 2016-19, and he blocked cross-party attempts to force a second referendum & made
an election inevitable. It was obvious what would happen once Johnson got his election, but Corbyn thought that he could play King Canute by touring the country shouting at the party faithful. Brexit was the biggest issue of the day, of a generation, and Labour, a party of social
inclusion and internationalism, was on the wrong side of it from the moment they elected Corbyn, a lifelong Brexiter, as leader. Labour failed to make the case against Brexit, that austerity, not the EU, was the cause of people’s ills, and after the referendum they doubled
#LeadershipDebate points missed (or deliberately avoided by Johnson): we don’t know all the facts about this case yet, and we won’t know for some time - the inquest could take up to 2 years. We don’t know why Khan killed, or what, if anything could have been done differently 1/
to prevent it. Let’s have an enquiry, not a witch hunt. Secondly, there is no justification AT ALL for cutting the early release tariff from a half to a third of sentences for all sentences over 4 years that carry a maximum life sentence; that‘s just trying to look tough 2/
on the backs of other prisoners’ suffering; if prisoners have engaged with rehabilitation & turned their lives around, why should they be punished for what Khan did? How will keeping them in for another few years keep public safe if they get released then with the same lack 3/