1. #13676
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    right, they got paid by MI6


    Boris Johnson: 'Frightened' neighbour defends recording partner row
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-48734660

    The neighbour who called police about a loud row at the home of Boris Johnson - and later reported it to a newspaper - has defended his actions.

    The Guardian said Mr Johnson's partner Carrie Symonds could be heard telling the Tory MP to "get out of my flat".

    Tom Penn told the paper he was worried about his neighbours' safety, adding: "I hope that anybody would have done the same thing."

    On Saturday, the Tory leadership hopeful avoided questions on the row.

  2. #13677
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Seekingasylum View Post
    Patience, patience........
    Brexit - It's Still On!-vulturespatiencemyass-jpg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Brexit - It's Still On!-vulturespatiencemyass-jpg  

  3. #13678
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dragonfly View Post
    The neighbour who called police about a loud row at the home of Boris Johnson - and later reported it to a newspaper - has defended his actions.
    It's a sorry state of affairs when a man can't beat his girlfriend in her own home without every man and his newspaper sticking their nose in.

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    you got it all wrong, she was beating him up

    definitely not prepared to take the Brexit battle if he gets beat down so easily by a woman

    not PM material

  5. #13680
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    And the guy thinks his past political performance is something to boast about.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dragonfly View Post
    so now a small fighting incident, a private matter, has now triggered the press into an anti-Bojo frenzy!!!

    sounds like MI6 has fired their magic bullets to take BoJo down, maybe they don't like Brexit either

    find it hard to believe that neighbors innocently recording this and then calling the police over it, and things going crazy from there

    obviously a campaign to destabilize him, thought the press loved him though
    No surprise that the establishment is anti-bojo. He's pro-leave, preferably with a deal, remotely possible with no deal though he remains firmly in the leave camp. Meanwhile Hunt was a Remainer that switched to Leave, which ought to make his motives questioned at best, and even if his defection wasn't in hopeful anticipation of furthering May's antics he's still more likely than bojo to defect or deliberately fudge proceedings.

    We know where one stands, regardless whether he can deliver, while the other could end up delivering the coup de grace to British politics.

  7. #13682
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    Prime Ministerial hopeful living in a flat. FFS. What is the world comng to?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Neverna View Post
    Prime Ministerial hopeful living in a flat. FFS. What is the world comng to?
    All MPs buy a London property, paid for by the UK citizens, as most are from faraway constituencies. If they are thrown out of parliament the flat is sold and the MP keeps the, historically high profit, for themselves. Does the UK taxpayer get any %, no.

    Many also employ family members, once again taxpayers pay for this privilege of blatant nepotism, as diary keepers, office help and researchers.

    One presumes the local Job Centre is asked to supply suitable candidates for the job opening and many are shortlisted but unfortunately are not successful.
    A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.

  9. #13684
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    the heat is on !!!

    Jeremy Hunt tells Boris Johnson 'don't be a coward' over scrutiny
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-48740193

    Jeremy Hunt has urged Tory leadership rival Boris Johnson not to be "a coward" about facing public scrutiny.

    He said he was "not interested" in Mr Johnson's private life but told him to "man up" and debate with him on Sky News this week.

    Mr Johnson, writing in the Daily Telegraph, signalled that his focus was on leaving the EU on 31 October.

    He suggested that the UK would face a "democratic explosion" if it did not leave by that date.

    In his newspaper column, he said: "This time we are not going to bottle it. We are not going to fail."

    It comes as Mr Johnson faces pressure to answer questions about a row with his partner in the early hours of Friday which led to police being called to his London home.

    The Metropolitan Police have said they will not be taking any further action on the incident.

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    hangin' around cyrille's Avatar
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    Does anybody trust a word BoJo says?

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    Demoratic explosion = a long, wet, dribbling fart from the lower end waiting for the pubs to open and the howls of anguish from a sclerotic bunch of middle-aged/elderly white nazis living in the Home Counties who have to pay more tax.

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    any more from your tea leaves and tarot cards about johnson calling it a day?

  13. #13688
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    Quote Originally Posted by cyrille View Post
    Does anybody trust a word BoJo says?
    of course not, but that's the not the point

    GB needs BoJo !!!

  14. #13689
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    Quote Originally Posted by Neverna View Post
    Prime Ministerial hopeful living in a flat. FFS. What is the world comng to?
    it's his girlfriend's flat, isn't it?

    and btw, what's the deal with this guy repeatedly cheating on his wife and having kids with his mistresses?

    is this what passes for conservative values in the UK these days?

  15. #13690
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    Quote Originally Posted by taxexile View Post
    any more from your tea leaves and tarot cards about johnson calling it a day?
    I may be just a little ahead of the curve but be patient, the moment is approaching fast.

    Did you know he loudly and proudly proclaimed to the assembled company, in justification of his compulsive desire to shag all and sundry, " I have a lot of spunk to get rid of". This chronic libidinous addiction coupled with his explosive, uncontrollable temper that he manifests frequently and regularly ( as evidenced so recently ) suggests a character one doesn't usually associate with high office but I'm sure he will be an admirable champion for Brexit filth.

    The knife is slowly but inexorably being brought level with his kidney into which it is soon to be plunged. Trust me tax, trust me.

    Remember, you read it here first.

    P.S. £ now 39.18 baht.

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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    it's his girlfriend's flat, isn't it?

    and btw, what's the deal with this guy repeatedly cheating on his wife and having kids with his mistresses?

    is this what passes for conservative values in the UK these days?
    He has married twice, had four children in wedlock but one outside and one which he forced his girlfriend to abort. Throughout his married lives he has shagged numerous whoopsies, the current one is the cause of his divorce after 25 years of marriage. He forced his many female research assistants to sign non-dosclosure agreements preventing them from detailing his sexual overtures. He once broke his itinerary as foreign secretary with an unscheduled aircraft stop so that he could shag an old slapper en route before he had to go home.
    The man has a vicious temper and gets violent when he loses it.

    Total cvunt but quite suitable material to lead the English Brexit scum and the current ragbag Tory party that is mostly turds floating down the sewer towards effluent oblivion.

  17. #13692
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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    it's his girlfriend's flat, isn't it?
    It depends if his "girlfriend", or should I say one of his UK Gov. employed "political researchers/stress relief assistants", is on the taxpayers teat.

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    i also read the times article the other day by his biographer.

    actually his words were "bursting with spunk"

    here is the hatchet job, sorry, article.

    Boris Johnson’s biographer: I know too well the fire and fury lurking behind that smile.

    No one who has witnessed Boris’s rage and the way he uses women will be surprised by the explosive row. A personality cult has veiled his true nature, says Sonia Purnell

    Sonia Purnell
    June 23 2019, 12:01am,
    The Sunday Times





    Boris Johnson can change from bonhomie to a dark fury in seconds. His normally joky demeanour flashes into a sarcastic snarl, his skin reddens and blotches, his eyes dart into an intense narrow glare and on the worst occasions his lips curl back to reveal wisps of spittle. The all-out favourite to be our next prime minister has the fiercest and most uncontrollable anger I have seen. A terrifying mood change can be triggered instantly by the slightest challenge to his entitlement or self-worth.

    It was the sight of Boris Johnson in full flow that convinced me all those years ago in the 1990s, when I worked alongside him in Brussels reporting on the EU for The Daily Telegraph, that he was temperamentally unsuitable to be entrusted with any position of power, let alone the highest office of all, in charge of the United Kingdom and its nuclear codes.

    This quality, combined with his casual relationship with the truth and often callous disregard of others, has caused many people who have worked closely with him to question his fitness for office. He bears grudges, resents being beholden to others and has sneaky and even threatening sides to his character.

    Perhaps that is what Michael Gove had discovered when he declared him unfit to govern and withdrew from backing his leadership campaign after the 2016 referendum, apparently discovering something about his colleague during the months of campaigning that worried him sufficiently to bale out of what had been seen as a dream team.

    Even the Court of Appeal expressed concerns in a judgment in 2013 on whether a gagging order should be granted to prevent publication of a story concerning his love child with an art consultant, Helen Macintyre. A senior judge raised questions about his fitness for power because of his “recklessness” about pregnancy and the feelings of others when conducting “extramarital adulterous liaisons”. Although Johnson never comments publicly about the number of his children, he is thought to have six, only four of whom are by his estranged wife Marina Wheeler, a top QC.


    Johnson has long been feared for his temper and sense of grievance. Indeed, when I was researching my book Just Boris: A Tale of Blond Ambition, the wife of one of his Bullingdon Club cohorts at Oxford (a wealthy man in a powerful job) said her husband “would not speak about Boris even off the record as he is frightened of what he might do back. A lot of people are.” Several people warned me to be “careful” if I criticised him.



    Johnson with first wife AllegraJohnson

    His former editor Max Hastings has also talked of his “startling flashes of instability”. When I worked as Johnson’s deputy in Brussels in an office of two, it took a long time to get used to what became known as his “four o’clock rants” in which he hurled four-letter words at an innocent yucca plant for several minutes at deadline time every day to work himself into a frenzy to write his creative tracts against the EU. He has admitted to this ritual, confessing that in his frenzy he had once crushed his palm down on a biro so hard that he actually drew blood.

    We may never know exactly what happened in Carrie Symonds’s flat early on Friday, six hours after Johnson was chosen as one of two MPs to seek election as leader by Tory party members. Or why there were shouts of “get off” or “get out” in her voice and a number of loud bangs. But beneath the shambolic exterior, the genial eye-rolling and the joke-cracking exterior that have made Johnson a favourite with millions — and until now the apparently unassailable contender to succeed Theresa May in No 10 — there has always been a darker cast to his character. The cult of personality that has arisen around him has enabled him to get away with his conduct scot-free.




    Petronella WyattPetronella Wyatt
    JOHNNY BOYLAN/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK


    His attitude to women — endless affairs leaving a string of women and at least one pregnancy termination behind him — has long been one of entitlement and lack of respect. He has boasted to other men that he needs plenty of women on the go as he is, as he says crudely, “bursting with spunk”. Over many years — going back to his youth where he expected girlfriends to pay for him and do his washing and cleaning while enduring his infidelity — the signs have been there. There was a reported affair with the journalist Anna Fazackerley and the mother of one mistress, Petronella Wyatt (then a writer at The Spectator), picked up the bill for an abortion. Macintyre’s boyfriend paid the private hospital expenses for the birth of his baby.



    Helena MacintyreHelena Macintyre
    DESMOND O’NEILL FEATURES LTD

    Even as a child his temper was legendary within the Johnson family. He once came to blows with his sister Rachel after a row over the identity of the lead singer of the Clash. On another occasion he kicked the wall so hard after losing a mere point at table tennis to Rachel that he broke his toe. Employees or visitors to the mayoral desk at London’s City Hall found it advisable to lose what were supposed to be enjoyable games.

    Boris — or Al, as he is known in the family (his first name is Alexander, while Boris is his second) — is often said to have inherited his grandfather Johnny’s short fuse. Stanley’s father was known for his outbursts, ones that dominated his family’s home life. That anger remains an issue. Rachel in particular is said to fear her brother’s ire if she dares to criticise him in public, or make her disagreement with his “leave” stance on Brexit too obvious. She has also talked of her brother’s “very Sicilian” attitude to anyone who crosses him. One victim was Roger Lewis who applied in 2010 for a chair at Oxford but who had made the mistake of criticising Johnson in print four years previously. Johnson threatened to pull out all the stops to prevent Lewis from winning the chair, and indeed he came an unexpected fifth on the list.

    That willingness to punish people who cross him was exposed after he agreed to help his criminal friend Darius Guppy track down a critical journalist to beat him up. Incredibly, the conversation was taped, and a copy anonymously sent to Hastings, then Johnson’s boss at the Telegraph. When Johnson was sent away with no more than a flea in his ear, his sense of entitlement and freedom from the normal rules of civilised life became even more acute.

    Last week saw allegations of dirty tricks in the election for the new Tory leader, in which Johnson has emerged as the clear favourite. They have been denied, but those who have tracked his career will remember a campaign to have him selected as the Tory candidate in the safe seat of Henley, which saw rivals smeared as gay (when that was a career-buster in the party), alcoholic or suspiciously left-wing. No one was ever found responsible for the anonymous phone calls and letters but Johnson emerged as winner.



    Johnson with second wife Marina WheelerJohnson with second wife Marina Wheeler
    REX/SHUTTERSTOCK

    More recently, sources close to the Johnson family say he has been deeply disturbed by the breakdown of his marriage to his second wife, Marina. They say he is “all over the place” and “psychologically unfit” to be a long-term partner for Symonds, let alone prime minister. They also say it was Marina who finally ended the 25-year union, refusing to put up with his philandering now that their youngest child, Theo, is at university.

    Johnson is thought to be unreconciled to Marina’s desire to move on and to still yearn for the steady presence she has been in his life after a childhood marred by his father’s infidelity and his mother Charlotte’s breakdown. There is, as yet, no record of the divorce going through and in the meantime Johnson is “devastated” by the anger of his children over his conduct. His eldest daughter, Lara (only five years younger than her father’s girlfriend), is said to be finding it difficult to forgive her father and none of the children is thought to have met Symonds.

    Marina knew better than to try to tame her exceptional husband, whether expecting him to tidy up after himself in the house (he is infamous for leaving cups lying around and not caring about leaving furniture soiled or damaged, his attitude to cleanliness recently on display in the back of his car) or to tidy his attire.

    Symonds has certainly tried to influence her partner’s appearance with some success, but it is perhaps revealing that she was heard shouting in Friday’s fracas about Johnson spilling red wine on her sofa. His casual attitude to other people’s money, leading Symonds to accuse him of being “spoilt”, was notorious during his time as a motoring columnist at GQ, when he ran up huge parking ticket bills by parking anywhere he wanted and expecting the magazine to pay.

    The sheer emotional fatigue of being married to Johnson shows on Marina’s face. But the strain has equally been clear with Symonds. Although Carrie had been said to be excited at the prospect — even likelihood — of being Britain’s next “first lady”, she showed little pleasure at the press conference launching his leadership campaign and even reached for a friend’s hand at one point for comfort. She may well have been disappointed at his performance, given that she had put in considerable effort to project him as a prime minister that would be appealing to women.

    Descriptions of women as “fillies” in earlier years and jokes about how voting Tory would “increase the size of your girlfriend’s breasts” had sullied his reputation with many women as an unreconstructed sexist. But Symonds’s close friend, the activist Nimko Ali, wrote a piece in the Johnson-supporting Daily Telegraph before the launch, saying she would back him as leader because his support of her work against female genital mutilation made him a “real feminist”. Johnson nevertheless chose to mock the two senior female journalists present — pretending to mishear Beth Rigby, political editor of Sky, and describing the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg’s points about his record as a “minestrone of observations”. He also refused to back down from his comments about Muslim women in the burqa looking like letterboxes or bank robbers.

    It is possible some of Johnson’s more incendiary comments — or perhaps his lack of commitment to Symonds’s favourite green agenda — could be behind their disagreements. Conservative sources have warned that some more hardline members of Johnson’s entourage see her “interference” in his campaign as “wearing” because of her progressive ideas.

    Their domestic fracas obviously raises all sorts of questions about the viability of her relationship with Johnson — but is also undoubtedly particularly upsetting for Symonds despite her resilience and self-confidence. At the age of 19 she became one of the youngest victims of the black cab rapist John Worboys, yet she found the courage to give evidence in court when other women were too frightened of having their reputations trashed.

    Symonds has ever since been terrified that he would be released and track her down, and she conducted a brilliant campaign to stop him being released on parole. The fact that she was almost certainly drugged and will never know exactly what happened to her is likely to make any domestic dispute like the one with Johnson last week more distressing.



    Melissa Crawshay-WilliamsMelissa Crawshay-Williams

    Certainly, Johnson’s former Commons secretary Melissa Crawshay-Williams was in fear of his outbursts. “Eighty per cent of the time working with him was wonderful,” she said. “The other 20% was terrible. Boris would swear a lot when he was frustrated.” She recounted how he often banged the table in anger so hard that once he nearly broke a bone.

    Mark Stanway, a sub-editor at the Telegraph, endured years of late copy that prevented him from getting home on time. The editor, Charles Moore, eventually tired of such discourtesy and one week discarded his copy. “Boris went completely ape. He phoned me f-ing and c-ing,” Stanway recalled. “I said it wasn’t my decision. Boris has a ferocious temper. He is not a cuddly teddy bear.”

    Sonia Purnell is the author of Just Boris: A Tale of Blond Ambition

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/past-six-...mile-03gqmxt5v

  19. #13694
    hangin' around cyrille's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    what's the deal with this guy repeatedly cheating on his wife and having kids with his mistresses?

    is this what passes for conservative values in the UK these days?
    What do you mean, these days?

    Ever hear of Jeffrey Archer or John Profumo?

    The difference is that now the chattering classes have come to regard politics as being a soap opera, with extra-curricular bonking a staple.

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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    is this what passes for conservative values in the UK these days?
    actually, it used to be worse, conservatives MPs will regularly get caught shagging their male boyfriends, and have their wife publicly stood next to them defending their actions as 'personal misunderstandings'

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    Tory leadership race: Sky set to cancel Johnson-Hunt debate
    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-48744724

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    hopefully, this little incident will be all forgotten by the time the Tories cast their final votes

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    Nicola Sturgeon Interview
    Boris Johnson Lacks 'Competence and Integrity'

    In an interview with DER SPIEGEL, Nicola Sturgeon, the head of the Scottish government, discusses her plans for an independence referendum, the possibility of a no-deal Brexit and the battle in the Tory Party to pick Theresa May's successor.

    First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, 48, is the head of the Scottish government and the chair of the Scottish National Party (SNP). The SNP has been shaping Scotland's future for the past 12 years with an unusual mixture of left-wing social policy and environmentalism, and a nationalist but immigration-friendly agenda. Sturgeon was also a prominent figure in the lead-up to Scotland's 2014 independence referendum, in which 55 percent of voters rejected the proposal to leave the United Kingdom. Sturgeon, a lawyer by profession from Glasgow, has now announced plans for a second referendum -- in two years at the latest.

    DER SPIEGEL: First Minister, are you crossing fingers that Boris Johnson will make it into Downing Street?

    Nicola Sturgeon: No. I think the prospect of Boris Johnson as prime minister is a horrifying one for most people, certainly in Scotland, but I suspect for large numbers of people across the United Kingdom as well.

    DER SPIEGEL: Mr. Johnson appears to be an advocate for a no-deal Brexit. And according to recent polls, no-deal would boost the desire for Scottish independence enormously. Isn't that exactly what you want?


    Sturgeon: I never relished the prospect of damaging things happening to the UK just to fuel the case for independence. I've always wanted that case to be fought and won on the positive perspectives for Scotland. I don't want Brexit to happen, although it will of course build support for independence, especially if Boris Johnson becomes prime minister.

    DER SPIEGEL: Have you read the poem Mr. Johnson authorized as the editor of The Spectator, where the author referred to the Scots as a "verminous race" who should be exterminated?

    Sturgeon: I've seen it, yes. I've also been reminded in the last couple of days of his comments that Scottish people couldn't become prime minister because of our political disability. Well, most Scottish people don't think he is capable of becoming prime minister either. So, the feeling is mutual.

    DER SPIEGEL: Johnson claims there is no better person to unite the United Kingdom than him. But is he?

    Sturgeon: There's nothing at all in Boris Johnson's political performance so far that would suggest that is the case. I travel a fair bit across Europe and further afield. And over the past couple of years, it has been very obvious that the UK's global reputation has been deeply damaged. The biggest cause of that is Brexit, obviously. But actually, pretty close behind is Boris Johnson's tenure as foreign secretary, when he demonstrated his lack of competence or any basic integrity. His career is littered with almost deliberate attempts to gratuitously offend groups in order to curry favor with somebody else. He's offended gays. He's offended Muslim women. Most people struggle to believe that somebody like him as prime minister could actually unite people in a common endeavor.

    Read more
    https://www.spiegel.de/international...a-1273642.html

  24. #13699
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    I was Boris Johnson’s boss: he is utterly unfit to be prime minister
    Max Hastings

    The Tory party is about to foist a tasteless joke upon the British people. He cares for nothing but his own fame and gratification.

    Six years ago, the Cambridge historian Christopher Clark published a study of the outbreak of the first world war, titled The Sleepwalkers. Though Clark is a fine scholar, I was unconvinced by his title, which suggested that the great powers stumbled mindlessly to disaster. On the contrary, the maddest aspect of 1914 was that each belligerent government convinced itself that it was acting rationally.

    It would be fanciful to liken the ascent of Boris Johnson to the outbreak of global war, but similar forces are in play. There is room for debate about whether he is a scoundrel or mere rogue, but not much about his moral bankruptcy, rooted in a contempt for truth. Nonetheless, even before the Conservative national membership cheers him in as our prime minister – denied the option of Nigel Farage, whom some polls suggest they would prefer – Tory MPs have thronged to do just that.

    Tory MPs have launched this country upon an experiment in celebrity government, matching that taking place in Ukraine and the US, and it is unlikely to be derailed by the latest headlines. The Washington columnist George Will observes that Donald Trump does what his political base wants “by breaking all the china”. We can’t predict what a Johnson government will do, because its prospective leader has not got around to thinking about this. But his premiership will almost certainly reveal a contempt for rules, precedent, order and stability.

    A few admirers assert that, in office, Johnson will reveal an accession of wisdom and responsibility that have hitherto eluded him, not least as foreign secretary. This seems unlikely, as the weekend’s stories emphasised. Dignity still matters in public office, and Johnson will never have it. Yet his graver vice is cowardice, reflected in a willingness to tell any audience, whatever he thinks most likely to please, heedless of the inevitability of its contradiction an hour later.


    Like many showy personalities, he is of weak character. I recently suggested to a radio audience that he supposes himself to be Winston Churchill, while in reality being closer to Alan Partridge. Churchill, for all his wit, was a profoundly serious human being. Far from perceiving anything glorious about standing alone in 1940, he knew that all difficult issues must be addressed with allies and partners.

    Churchill’s self-obsession was tempered by a huge compassion for humanity, or at least white humanity, which Johnson confines to himself. He has long been considered a bully, prone to making cheap threats. My old friend Christopher Bland, when chairman of the BBC, once described to me how he received an angry phone call from Johnson, denouncing the corporation’s “gross intrusion upon my personal life” for its coverage of one of his love affairs.


    “We know plenty about your personal life that you would not like to read in the Spectator,” the then editor of the magazine told the BBC’s chairman, while demanding he order the broadcaster to lay off his own dalliances. Bland told me he replied: “Boris, think about what you have just said. There is a word for it, and it is not a pretty one.”
    He said Johnson blustered into retreat, but in my own files I have handwritten notes from our possible next prime minister, threatening dire consequences in print if I continued to criticise him.


    Johnson would not recognise truth, whether about his private or political life, if confronted by it in an identity parade. In a commonplace book the other day, I came across an observation made in 1750 by a contemporary savant, Bishop Berkeley: “It is impossible that a man who is false to his friends and neighbours should be true to the public.” Almost the only people who think Johnson a nice guy are those who do not know him.


    There is, of course, a symmetry between himself and Jeremy Corbyn. Corbyn is far more honest, but harbours his own extravagant delusions. He may yet prove to be the only possible Labour leader whom Johnson can defeat in a general election. If the opposition was led by anybody else, the Tories would be deservedly doomed, because we would all vote for it. As it is, the Johnson premiership could survive for three or four years, shambling from one embarrassment and debacle to another, of which Brexit may prove the least.


    For many of us, his elevation will signal Britain’s abandonment of any claim to be a serious country. It can be claimed that few people realised what a poor prime minister Theresa May would prove until they saw her in Downing Street. With Boris, however, what you see now is almost assuredly what we shall get from him as ruler of Britain.


    We can scarcely strip the emperor’s clothes from a man who has built a career, or at least a lurid love life, out of strutting without them. The weekend stories of his domestic affairs are only an aperitif for his future as Britain’s leader. I have a hunch that Johnson will come to regret securing the prize for which he has struggled so long, because the experience of the premiership will lay bare his absolute unfitness for it.


    If the Johnson family had stuck to showbusiness like the Osmonds, Marx Brothers or von Trapp family, the world would be a better place. Yet the Tories, in their terror, have elevated a cavorting charlatan to the steps of Downing Street, and they should expect to pay a full forfeit when voters get the message. If the price of Johnson proves to be Corbyn, blame will rest with the Conservative party, which is about to foist a tasteless joke upon the British people – who will not find it funny for long.
    https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...-party-britain

  25. #13700
    RIP
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    Cyrille you utter boring moronic, cockwomble, knob jockey, what you know about Brexit and British politics could be written on the back of a postage stamp.


    Johnson will be the next PM.

    Brexit will be delivered

    You will always be a cock

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