“Politicians, like priests, will always make their easiest converts among “the weak, the unlucky, the resentful, the fearful and the poor”. We should care for these people, of course we should, but not always for their views.” thetimes.co.uk/article/the-po…
The problem is not so much Starmer as his boss, the Labour Party.
I have great admiration for many of the Party’s MPs but the context in which they operate is one of a never ending, exhausting, bitter political in fight leading to bad policies to appease the unwise.
As for Johnson.
“There’s no spray-on defeat for this man. Why do we think the voters haven’t yet cottoned on? They have. And they aren’t bothered. When you keep telling people something and they don’t seem to take any notice,
...”it’s either because they don’t want to know or they know already and don’t care. There’s no point in holding Johnson to some moral standard to which he has never pretended. Better and perhaps more constructive to hold him to what he has pretended:....
Hold him to his own account
“that Tory government can rescue those parts of Britain that have sunk, while others have risen. It can’t, or won’t, be done”
Will they even care then? Or will they give him another free pass like a beaten wife.?
I hope Labour can manage to pull itself out of this longstanding war zone.
Hartlepool may be sore loss but hardly surprising given its 69% Brexit vote and BXP vote in 2019.
In other places they have fared better so worth waiting until the end of the day to review.
In politics there is a market in anxiety and a market in optimism. The market in anxiety is the easiest to capture. And this week the Conservative party consolidated its old on the disappointed, the nostalgic & the fearful.
“A party that pitches to the angry or the resentful soon begins to look like them”.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
NAVALNY:
“The head of the Omsk Ministry of Health, Alexander Murakhovsky, disappeared in the forest while hunting. Murakhovsky gained fame after Alexei Navalny was poisoned at the hospital he headed.
Over the past year, a number of hospital doctors have already resigned or died.”
“On March 26, after suffering a stroke in December, Rustam Agishev, head of the hospital's traumatology and orthopedics department, died”
“On Feb 4, Sergey Maksimishin, the deputy head of the hospital, died suddenly. The cause of death of the 55-year-old doctor in the hospital was not named.”
How long before the middle classes show their force saying they are now the “ignored” and “sneered at” particularly when so many have pulled themselves up by the bootstraps from poverty and have no wish to return there.
Meanwhile both main political parties fight over their version of “the working class”, currently with the Tories’ aspirational version seemingly gaining ascendency in many places at present.
Labour presents its version as “looking after” the working classes when I am guessing many want to get out of it. Certainly my parents did.
“They have brought their cases to dear old London town, with its quaint judges in 18th-century wigs and gowns and gothic courtrooms, and with laws that can look as if they are made to match, for all their claims to modernity.”
“As Belton appeared to foresee, London’s lawyers are hard at work. Carter-Ruck, CMS, Harbottle & Lewis and Taylor Wessing have a billionaire apiece in a kind of socialism of the litigious.”
This seems to confuse duties of confidence to individuals that arise out of the relationship between medical professionals & patients (to which there are exceptions - rarely exercised), the disclosure of personal identifiable data that may apply to other organisations.
Picture of two pandemics: Covid cases fall in rich west as poorer nations suffer | Coronavirus | The Guardian
More cases have been reported in the past two weeks than in the entire first six months of the pandemic, with south Asia bearing the brunt. theguardian.com/world/2021/may…
“Africa now accounts for only 1% of vaccine doses administered globally, the WHO said, down from 2% a few weeks ago, as other regions’ vaccine distribution programmes are progressing much faster”.
“The first vaccines deliveries to 41 African countries under the Covax scheme began in March, but nine countries have so far administered only a quarter of the doses received, while 15 countries have used less than half of their allocations.”