1. Loving crowds of flag-waving patriots loudly booed Boris Johnson, the one-man game of shag, marry, avoid who is still – amazingly – our PM
2. Priti Patel, the Shetland Pony of the Apocalypse, told Tory MPs not to attempt to sack Johnson because of the Jubilee
3. They obliged, and instead attempted to sack him less than 24 hours later
4. Jacob Rees-Mogg, the harrowing result of a Dalek having hate sex with a pendulum, had previously said 33% of Tory MPs with no confidence in Theresa May was “a disaster”
5. A total of 41 percent of Tory MPs have no confidence in Johnson, which JRM said was a "great success"
6. Ministers have their jobs because of the PM, so are supposed to back him. If you assume they all did, that means 75% of Tory backbenchers didn’t back him
7. An-arch Johnson loyalist leaped to his defence, telling journalists “Off the record, he is fucked”
8. Johnson turned up on TV wild-eyed, agitated and constantly sniffing, to babble incomprehensibly about his amazing accomplishments
9. There’s a fine line between madness and genius, and it looked like Johnson had just snorted that line
10. A govt whip said Tory MPs should now “shut the fuck up”
11. Nadine Dorries didn’t shut the fuck up
12. Instead Dorries, forever trapped at Lambrini o-clock, “defended” the govt’s record by publicly admitting it had made shit preparations for Covid for 6 years
13. Feral gonad Nadhim Zahawi described his own govt as “a circular firing squad”
14. Johnson, chastened and humbled by his Partygate shame, reassured his disgruntled MPs by telling them he’d “do it all again”
15. To “get on with his job”, he headed to Blackpool to do a bewildering speech
16. He said the UK has the worst economy in the G7 cos “we came out of the pandemic first, so had a faster recovery”
17. So – deep breath – we’re doing badly because we are doing so well. Huh?
18. His solution to the cost of living crisis, is telling everyone to earn less, and cut nurse pay by £1,600 in real-terms
19. Hospitals are now opening on-site foodbanks, not for patients, but for nursing staff who already can’t afford to feed themselves on their wages
20. Having scored brilliantly on his first two solutions, he moved onto housing
21. He began by saying we need 300k more homes
22. Then he said building more homes isn’t the answer
23. Then he said it was Labour’s fault for not building enough homes
24. Then he said he built more homes than Labour when he was mayor
25. 63% of the homes built in London when he was mayor were started by Labour
26.Then he repeated that building more homes isn’t the answer
28. And then he said he wouldn’t meet his manifesto promise on housing, which guarantees – yep – 300k new homes
29. Clearly feeling he’d settled that matter, he then spent a few minutes of his speech bewailing the lack of olive and banana plantations in Blackpool. No joke.
30. Confident he had regained the trust of us all, he moved onto fixing mortgages.
31. He announced that to help renters save for a deposit, he would sell their rented homes, so there would be fewer of them, which will make rents cost more, making it harder to save. Brilliant.
32. But he had a lovely idea, which is to force banks to accept people’s benefits as a mortgage, meaning people who are currently unable to eat on collapsing benefits will soon be able to buy a that doesn't exist, if they simply stop eating even more
33. Johnson called this a “housing revolution”
34. Shelter called it “baffling, unworkable and dangerous”
35.Michael Gove, a beached mudskipper dressed in boy clothes, called it a “marvellous scheme”
36.The New Economics Foundation called it “totally detached from reality”
37. Chris Philp, drawing the short straw and having to defend this gibberish, explained on TV that selling houses currently available to rent would not reduce the number of houses available to rent because...
38. The end of the previous sentence has not yet been discovered
39. Economic news! Brexit has cost us £31bn in a year, making everybody 5% poorer
40. To help out, Rishi Sunak, whose primary skill appears to be taking off his jacket, ignored warnings about insuring against interest rate rises, which this week cost us £11bn
41. And the govt is burning £4bn of substandard PPE that it had ordered at above-market value from its pals
42. So that’s £46bn wasted since Monday, the equivalent to £3,600 per hour for 1458 years, or £1 per second, every single second since the Romans withdrew from Britain
43. Let's get the screaming out of the way, and move onto minor incidents of the week
44. Top priority for the govt: refusing to sign up to standardised USB ports, meaning Apple’s “lightning connector” will work everywhere on earth except here. Yay we are saved!
45. After a Tory MP had to quit his seat for watching porn TWICE in the chamber of the House of Commons, the govt announced it would not reveal details of it’s other MP’s on-site masturbation habits for “national security reasons”
46. A former 12-time Tory candidate was imprisoned for sending racist death threats to David Lammy
47. The cost of the Grenfell Tower inquiry reached £150m, compared to the £293k of “savings” which caused the fire in the first place
48. “I’m not interested in social mobility”, said Katharine Birbalsingh, who is the govt’s social mobility tsar
49. She then said Boris Johnson “isn’t a good role model”, proving a broken cock is right twice a day. Sorry, did I say cock? I meant cock.
50. Priti Patel claimed the UN refugee council backed the Rwanda deportation plan
51. The UN refugee council said her plan breached the law, and it’s being contested in court
52. The Home Office claims Ukrainian asylum seekers and children excluded from the Rwanda plan
55. But the govt admitted the “vast majority” of peers would block the bill, rendering it pointless
56. Daily Express said Brexit would not be done for decades, will cost £1.4 trillion, and Jacob Rees-Mogg’s ideas for it are “impossible”
57.Commence howling now
I'm contractually obliged to mention I've got a book coming out, but don't buy it - if you have a spare tenner, please donate to @MAGsaveslives
Your donation will be matched by the govt until 24 July. They're clearing mines in #Ukraine and elsewhere
Apart from the utter horror of what it does to countless women and children, I can't help but feel the Roe v Wade ruling is going to turn into an absolute political disaster for those who wanted it.
For a start, this isn't some minor political scandal that people forget after a few months. It's a life-changing, maybe life-ending, utter tragedy for those affected. And for their families and friends. It won't fade into the background, and those responsible won't be forgiven.
Secondly, millions will vote with their feet, the young fleeing states that impose bans. This will gut their tax base in two ways: loss of a generation or two of taxpayers, and loss of businesses and investment that relied on those workers, but will now invest elsewhere.
By-election day in #TivertonandHoniton , so let me tell about their former MP, who was once one of the most famous people in England, a national hero, a disgraced fraudster, and an astonishingly accomplished piratical maniac.
He had quite a life.
Admiral Sir Thomas Cochrane was born in 1775 in Hamilton, Scotland, and I should confess immediately that I really admire the guy.
I also think he was capable of epic twattery, and if he was alive now he'd be in jail or Downing Street. Probably both.
Same old same old.
Practically as soon as he was potty-trained, he began his career of indisputable heroism, technical innovation, radical politics, nepotism, corrupting elections, stock-market fraud, almost starting world wars, legalised piracy, mercenary warfare, and shameless bullshit.
1. Let’s start with spindly, posturing mantis Jacob Rees-Mogg, who this week blocked a bill that spares elephants from torture
2. As foodbank use reached 2.6 million, JRM spent £1400 per person for ministers to learn how to create a “powerful personal presence”
3. Last year Lord Geidt, Boris Johnson’s ethics advisor – think of it as like being Shane MacGowan’s dental hygienist – had said his resignation would be a “last resort” and would only be used to send “a critical signal into the public domain”
4. This week he resigned
5. Geidt said prime minister and abandoned candyfloss Boris Johnson had placed him in an “odious” position by asking him to approve (another) breach of the ministerial code
6. Johnson has had 2 ethics advisors, and they have both resigned over Johnson’s irredeemable behaviour
The Horny Honey Monster is on the ropes, so I think it's time to take a quick look at the runners and riders poised to take over from Boris Johnson.
It's an inspiring list.
🧵
Liz Truss
The kind of foreign minister you'd expect to find on Gumtree. A LibDem, then a Tory. Opposed Brexit, then wanted it. Said she'd resign over it, then that she'd do anything to deliver it. Eventually decided it was too complicated and hid.
Thatcher from Elizabeth Duke.
Jeremy Hunt
A demonic pixie with persona of a polyester-blazered assistant in a soft-furnishings shop. As health minister he spent his hours auctioning your wellbeing off to – well, I’d like to say the highest bidder, but I doubt he’s competent enough to get a good price.
As some of you might expect, the latest banshee howl that is #TheWeekInTory is quite lengthy, and I advise a deep dive into your preferred sedative before beginning.
Let us begin where the last one ended, which is, astonishingly, a mere 5 days ago [queue wobbly screen]...🧵
1. Having spent a week insisting there was nothing wrong with avoiding £20 million in tax while being responsible for raising tax, Space Family Sunak have now concluded that for PR purposes their monumental, sickening greed is “not compatible with British fairness”
2. Sunak insisted he should not be associated with his spouse for tax purposes
3. This came as a shock to the rest of us, for whom our spouse’s income affects every personal tax matter, every mortgage application, and all benefits claims
1. Let’s start #TheWeekInTory with PartyGate, where randy Honey Monster and (no, really) Prime Minister Boris Johnson denied 20 fines meant there had been wrongdoing
2. This doesn’t quite explain why he had personally phoned the Queen to apologise for all the wrongdoing
3. Regardless, The Met issued MASSIVE fines of £50 for breaching lockdown rules
4. Last week a £2,200 was handed down to a member of the public (who didn't live or work in Downing St) for breaching lockdown rules, thus proving we’re all equal in the eyes of the law
5. Maria Caulfield said the PM was “very clear there was wrongdoing”
6. Same TV show, she said the PM “did not believe there was wrongdoing”
7. Dom Cummings (Lucius Malfoy after a flash-fire) said “the PM encouraged attacks on junior officials” to distract from his own crimes