Part 98 – This Page Intentionally Blank

“This stinks of a cover-up by Number 10. Even Richard Nixon believed a country deserves to know whether their leader is a crook” (Ed Davey)

Dirty Dozens

Haiga – A Moment of Calm

The storm moved to the east coast Monday, leaving the valley mostly calm and bright.  Posting a haigai  and the journal took most of the day, excepting lunch and essential chores.  Due to the weather, mounds of recycling littered the house. Phil helped with disposal.  One eye on the news, he précised the Sue Gray report but as the incomplete document was 12 pages (less if you ignored ‘this page intentionally blank’), I read it myself.iii

Specifics missing, Gray berated the culture at the ‘heart of government’, failure of leadership and judgement, unprofessional consumption of excessive amounts of alcohol, inappropriate use of the Number 10 garden, and concluded rules weren’t followed.  As operational structures hadn’t kept pace with expansion of the PM’s office and staff felt unable to report concerns, ‘lessons to learn’ should be addressed immediately.  The Bumbler began his commons statement with another vacuous apology, saying he understood people’s anger, and he’d fix it by reviewing codes of conduct and creating an Office of the PM with a permanent sec. – would that address the accountability vacuum?  He then blathered about government achievements.  Keir responded Gray made ‘the most damning conclusions’ with a PM under criminal investigation and making people feel like fools, although they shouldn’t as they saved lives.  Quite!  I kept saying those who stuck to rules did the right thing and should stop whinging they didn’t hug!  Phil asserted we were locked down to keep tory toffs safe.  The comment from Carrie’s party mate 13th November seemed to support that.  Keir alleged Boris wouldn’t resign because he was ‘a man without shame’.  Boris called that ‘a tissue of nonsense’ but others echoed pleas for full publication of findings.  Andrew Mitchell withdrew his support and Ian Blackford ejected himself after repeating Boris broke lockdown rules and ‘wilfully misled parliament’.

Of the 16 ‘gatherings’ in scope, The met were looking into 12 (8 in Downing Street and 4 in the cabinet office)*.  With 300 photos and 500 documents of the ‘Dirty Dozen’, they pledged to fast-track the investigation within weeks.  At an emergency meeting of tory MPs, Boris allegedly banged the table screaming he’d nearly died of Covid.  Trussed-Up Liz was spotted without a mask, later tested positive and wouldn’t accompany him to The Ukraine.  As he’d cancelled a planned call to Vlad, David Lammy said it was an example of the ‘real world consequences’ of the distraction and Layla Moran complained: “This is the man who picked pleading with his backbenchers over talking tough to Vladimir Putin.”  Meanwhile, Hong Kong politician Caspar Tsui resigned after being discovered attending a banquet.  Our leaders could learn a lesson there!  On Newsnight, small minister Paul Scuzzball contrarily argued that as Boris was at deaths door, he understood the issues!  Tory activists said with no contrition and no confidence, his days were numbered.  Journalists agreed, seeing the interim report as a ‘series of smoking guns yet to come’.  I looked forward to the adaptation of Sue Gray and the Party Detectives into a Netflix series or, more likely, a low-key Brit flick!

Two years after the first hospital admissions of covid patients in Newcastle, NHS bosses warned of frontline staff quitting if forced to have jabs.  Ministers said the policy could be ditched after consultation, including for social care.  Would the 30,000 sacked workers return?  Several areas of Beijing underwent lockdown and daily testing ahead of the Winter Olympics.  Back-to-back storms forced the Thames barrier to close, blew lorries over, hampered train services and left 45,000 homes power-less.  Winds reached 90 mph in  Stonehaven where unhappy residents whinged this was the second time since November.  In The Great Drain Robbery, thieves stole 160 cast iron drain covers in Doncaster to sell for scrap.

Cleaning out the fridge Tuesday, I found chilli jam so old mould erupted on the lid, a lump of ice in the runnel and a puddle beneath the crisper drawer.  I spent ages scrubbing a minging juicer stored on top.  The days long gone when chucking 40% of our fruit in the form of pulp was a good idea, we agreed to donate the unused item charity.  The chore was punctuated with refreshment breaks, writing and shopping.  Sunny and mild to start, a stiff breeze assailed me on the way to a quiet co-op where I discussed the price of seeds and compostable bags with my namesake at the till.  Feeling iffy, I  forced myself to write in the afternoon.  Mind blank trying to work on the novel, I composed an add-on for Cool Placesii and posted a photo of pink winter blossom for Elderly Neighbours’ birthday (See below).

9.9% of covid cases over the past year were reinfections.  Previously 2%, it showed earlier illness didn’t protect against Omicron.  The WHO recommended treatments Sotrovimab and Baricitinib. DOHSC accounting revealed £8.5 bn written off for lost, faulty or expired PPE.  The IOPC published details of racist, sexist and homophobic messages between officers at Charing Cross cop shop 2016-2018.  The 2 dismissed were not isolated ‘bad apples’.  After announcing the closure of 317 meat, fish and deli counters and Jack’s discount stores, changes to overnight working put another 1,600 Tesco jobs at risk.  Our local farm shop featured on Look North.  Open since 1974, the 81 year old owner offered a  lifeline for remote villagers in bad weather and lockdowns, delivering essential supplies.  In Grimsby ahead of unveiling the Levelling Up white paper, The Glove-Puppet said London’s elite didn’t understand the problems of overlooked communities.  His plans involved elected mayors for every part of England and a dozen ‘national missions’, with targets for the economy, housing, education, transport and culture up to 2030 in 55 areas.  20 urban regeneration projects would start with Sheffield and Wolverhampton.  Criticised for no new money and lack of ambition, Lisa Nandy called it shuffling deckchairs and Tracy Brabin suggested he prioritise early years and bringing HS2 to the young, vibrant city of Bradford.

Boris known to have attended at least 3 of the ‘Dirty Dozen’, police guidance stated identities of those issued fixed penalty notices ‘should not be released or confirmed’.  Rayner inveighed: “I can’t believe this needs saying. The public have a right to know if the PM is found to have committed an offence.”  Ed Davey added it stank of a cover-up.  Rabid Raab implied Boris still didn’t think he’d done any wrong saying: “(he) believes he acted in good faith at all times.”  Downing Street later said they’d reveal if Boris was fined.  In Kyiv to speak to president Volodymyr Zelensky before a press conference and rescheduled call to Vlad, No. 10 claimed he spearheaded the international response.  An international joke more like!  White House press aide Jen Psaki chortled at ambushing cakes in faces, Russian TV sniggered Boris was a henpecked wannabe emperor mocked even by kids, and former tory diplomat Rory Stewart sputtered: “This idea that somehow Boris…is single-handedly defending Ukraine from Russia is pure fantasy.”

Dancing In The Gaslight

Savile and Thatcher

Waking with a creaky jaw the last 2 mornings, further evidence I  was grinding my teeth while sleeping due to anxiety, emerged a few days later. Careful exercise helped ease the discomfort Wednesday.

Boris parroting the accusation from right-wing social media that Keir failed ‘to prosecute Jimmy Savile’, Nazir Afzal on BBC Breakfast said in the 3 years he worked under him as DPP, they had record child abuse convictions.  In fact, decisions were made locally, Keir apologised and commissioned an investigation which blamed Surrey prosecutors and police for the mess.  Causing ructions in the tory ranks, Tobias Ellwood was one of 3 to submit letters of no confidence and on Newsnight, David Liddington derided the ‘crude, stupid distraction tactics’ and a lack of emotional intelligence that ‘sapped trust’.  Nick Watt called the gaslighting a death sentence.  “Hmm!” mused Phil, “who’s the one who likes dressing up, visiting hospitals and says he’ll fix it…“  And let’s not forget, Savile was a tory.  A photo of the nonce posing for the Tory 2010 election campaign turned out to be fake but ones of him with Thatcher weren’t.

Lindsay Hoyle read ‘the bible’ on parliamentary language before PMQs.  If Ian Blackford had to retract calling Boris a liar, why didn’t Boris have to recant his comment on Savile? I wondered.  The Bumbler toadied to the queen and told Esther McVey mandatory jabs for the NHS would be abandoned.  Tongue in cheek, Keir queried if part of Operation Save Big Dog was being ‘tax-cutting conservatives’, why did they keep raising them for workers while protecting oil companies and banks and ’gaslight’ the British public with stealth taxes?  To Boris’ usual waffle, he responded: ‘lots of words, lots of bluster, but no answers’ and joked that wouldn’t work with the police!  He pointed out wastage and fraud during the pandemic equalled the extra taxes and asked why he wasn’t investigating that instead of squeezing people to the pips?  Boris spewed a load of figures, rubbish about record amounts of PPE and getting ventilators from footballers.  Keir repeated he needed to sharpen how he answered questions.

I was stealing myself to take the redundant juicer to the charity shop in the drizzle when Phil offered to go.  Relieved, I did some admin and messaging, setting a record 3 social engagements for the month (lunch with Walking Friend and AN Other Friday, an exhibition with Manchester Friend and a drink with The Researcher late Feb).  The so-called wine rack stuffed with miscellaneous items, Phil returned as I began sorting them to reclaim mechanical whisks and a mixing bowl, then left me to evict spiders, scour utensils, start another charity bag and make room in cupboards.

Hospital cases down, more deaths were recorded than for almost a year.  Figures excluded Scotland.  Nasty Patel told the home affairs committee the IOPC findings showed a ‘failure of leadership’ (sic) but didn’t say Dick should go.  Yvette Coop wanted action from the home office as well as The Met.  Boris made the postponed call to Vlad and tweeted the way out of hostilities was diplomacy.  So, calling the Russians hostile was diplomatic, was it?  After legal advice that SPS checks required approval from the Stormont Executive, DUP minister Edwin Poots ordered officials at Daera** to stop Irish Sea border checks from midnight.  Back doors opened at the Port of Belfast the next morning.  Saying issues could be resolved through the protocol, Sinn Fein accused him of playing party politics.  4 Insulate Britain protestors got stuck in jail after gluing themselves outside the High Court while chants of ‘Boris out’ were ignored during Westminster news broadcasts.

Lower leg cramp woke me in the early hours Thursday.  Unable to reach, I tried shaking it out but the knee agonisingly locked up.  On the verge of tears, I attempted to stand and hobbled to the bathroom.  After a bit more sleep, the pain alleviated enough to perform most of my exercise routine.  Telling Phil I‘d never known anything like it, he said he had and I worried not for the first time, if it was arthritis.  I rushed chores and writing tasks to go to town, greeting 3 lesser-spotted neighbours along the street.  The centre strangely quiet in the dull dampness, I discussed the inflationary cost of cough drops, energy price hikes and treasury plans for loans and rebates with Sweet Shop man.  Ofgem raised the cap to £1,971.  Rishi dished out £200 rebates on electricity bills from October (to be paid back from 2023, though Goldman Sachs doubted prices would drop until 2025) and £150 off council tax (the treasury gave councils £144m).  Unimpressed, labour called it ‘buy now pay later’ and asked why there was no cut in VAT or windfall tax for Shell, who made £14bn profit?  BOE simultaneously put interest up to 0.5%, predicted inflation of 7.25% by April and said it wasn’t a good time to ask for more pay.  So much for the high skills, high wage economy!  GMB’s Gary Smith retorted: “telling the hard-working people who carried this country through the pandemic they don’t deserve a pay rise is outrageous.”  Elsewhere, France put a 4% limit on fuel rises, Belgium slashed VAT and Greece increased the minimum wage by 2%.

On the market, I bantered on posh names for bog roll with Jolly Veg man and topped up supplies in convenience stores to postpone a trip to the co-op, then lugged bags home and faffed to fit mussels in a bowl until Phil came to help.  He began scrubbing a Dutch oven but desperate for lunch, I bade him leave it.

Effective against Omicron, Novavax was approved following trials in Leeds and Bradford.  A caller to Jeremy Vine called Boris a baboon and David Davis said he suffered death by a thousand cuts with the party in a state of paralysis.  As if to illustrate his point, director of communications Jack Doyle and head of policy Munira Mirza quit; she cited the Savile slur.  Stopping short of an apology, Boris insisted he was making a point about responsibility for the organisation as a whole.  What!  Like he was responsible for the antics in No. 10?  Late evening, PPS Martin Reynolds and Chief of Staff Dan Rosenfeld also left Downing Street pursued the next morning by special adviser Elena Narozanski.  At least 2 of them were at parties.  Energy minister Greg Hands said it proved the PM was ‘taking charge’.  DUP MLA Paul Givan resigned, meaning Michelle O’Neil also lost her post, power-sharing at Stormont ended and the exec couldn’t meet.  How did that square with them having authority to change import rules?  Sinn Fein said the political opportunism had catastrophic impacts ahead of May elections.  A high Court judge subsequently suspended Poot’s decision to stop import checks, until a full judicial review to avoid confusion ‘hanging over’ civil servants.

Discussing mandatory vaccines for health staff on QT, a sceptic with piles of scrappy notes disputed a vax scientist.  Robin Shattock tried to be nice but ended up saying he was talking crap.  Torygraph weirdo Tim Stanley thought it good to have the debate and mandating counter-productive.  NHS Confederation’s Victor Adebowale said with 95% staff uptake but only 89% for BME, they had rights but also responsibilities.  Crispin Blunt believed it sensible to re-assess the policy on evidence.  A nurse in the audience claimed natural immunity from having covid protected her.  Shattock informed her that varied and asked if an antibody test might persuade her?  “Maybe.”  Probed on if Boris damaged the tory party, Crispin said we were being played by The Scumbag and repeated the assertion not everyone followed the rules.  Weirdo Tim bizarrely compared Boris to a character from Oceans 11, Rosena Allin-Khan maintained the ‘consistent liar’ wasn’t fit for office, before or now, and Victor called him a moral vacuum.  Robin asked: who do you trust?

Interviewed on Newscast, Rishi said Boris was right to apologise, evaded questions on standing for leader and claimed to have seen no parties from Number 11’s window.  A day later, The Mirror reported The Met had a photo of Boris holding a can of beer at his lockdown birthday party, standing next to Rishi in the cabinet room.  Shot by Andrew Parsons (one of 3 of The Bumbler’s official tax-funded photographers) who documented the event, it proved they didn’t give a shit!

Mixing It Up

Pink Winter Blossom

So much happened in the world of politics late the previous night, trying to get a grip Friday morning was hindered by Phil rambling and Walking Friend texting to ask if I could be ready early.  To avoid rushing, I arranged to meet at the corner pub instead, hastened my notes and put a face on.   No sign of them outside, AN Other waved to me from inside the pub.  They mixed coffee and Bailey’s but I eschewed drinking during a catch-up and deciding what next.  On the way to the big charity shop, a feint rainbow provided a backdrop for a cloud of squawking corvids.  We ambled down the still oddly quiet pedestrian street.  AN Other liked the look of the wood burner in the cocktail bar.  Unsure if they served food, she asked to be given a Med café menu.  As she re-arranged the furniture to feel the heat, I wryly told the waitress: “sorry about this.”  The partnership arrangement involved staff toing and froing across the street.  Over inevitably tepid dishes, we discussed holidays, labyrinthine German tax laws and mutual acquaintances.  I expressed relief at not going to Deceased Friends’ wake after the family all got covid and learnt another old pub mate died of cancer last month.  Walking Friend fed pigeons to distract them before feeding ducks on the wavy steps.  Visiting more charity shops, we ended up at one near our street.  AN Other drove back across the moor, Walking Friend went to the co-op and I went home, agreeing it made a change mixing up our lunch-meets.  A mélange of chatter crowding my head, I couldn’t relax at all during a siesta.

ONS found risk of death from covid dropped 93% after 3 jabs.  Rishi having distanced himself from Boris’ slur, Goblin Saj said Keir should be respected for doing a good job as DDP but the PM ‘clarified remarks’ on the Savile issue and still had his support.  Nick Gibb, the latest tory MP to publicly call for Boris to go, cited constituents’ fury ‘about the double standards’ and the PM’s ‘inaccurate’ commons statements.  Meanwhile, Liam Fox waited to see what happened and in a round of drunken interviews, batty Nads Doris claimed 97% of tories backed Boris and it was all a Remoaners plot.  After taking the big plane to Blackpool to play with trams, Boris returned to rally the troops and quote ‘change is good’ from the Lion King.  “It really is The Lying King!” I laughed.  Ukrainian architects Studio Makhno designed Plan C, bagels for settlers on Mars to inhabit craters, with food grown in orbiting spherical greenhouses. Did they nick the idea from The Expanse?

A watery sun presaged grey rain Saturday.  Rather scatty, I kept drifting off, but rallied with caffeine.  Nowt on telly, we watched extras on a DVD so it could go in the charity bag.  Disposing of recycling, I found dog poo on the doorstep, angrily scrubbed it off and railed I was starting to take it personal.  Phil thought dogs simply needed a crap when they reached the top of the steps.  Heading to the main road, car lights on the gloomy roads made it appear like midwinter again.  Among gaps in the co-op, I got a cheap pineapple.  What was that about affordable fruit?  At the till, teenage girls carefully handled a carrier like it was precious.  The nice young Scottish cashier told me it was a cappuccino glass.  Pausing halfway through scanning my stuff, she apologised for having a moment.  “It’s okay, I’ve been scatty today.” “Good.” “Is it?”  “Yeah, if you can’t pause on a day like this, when can you? Have a nice evening.” “It’s not evening yet. It just looks like it.” “I don’t mind this weather.”  I stopped myself replying she was probably used to it!  I trudged back and collapsed on the sofa while Phil watched Olympic skiing, commenting on the fakery in an area of China that barely got 20cm of rain a year, let alone snow!  Working on the journal, I got mixed up with all the Westminster parties, checked the BBC news list and discovered 2 were excluded from the report, including Shaun Bailey’s lavish buffet.  “That sounds like an excellent idea!” exclaimed Phil, googled an all-you-can-eat in Blackpool and declared he now used tory antics as a kind of tarot.  Cooking the pineapple with a splash of sambuca, Phil queried why we never drank it.  “We don’t really mix drinks anymore.”

Raining all night, sheets of hail careened down the valley Sunday.  And it was so dark!  No possibility of a walk, I worked on the journal and tried cleaning kitchen chairs.  Mysterious splotches persisting, Phil’s idea of using turps to expunge them might wait ‘til we could work outside.  We also made some arrangements for Phil’s birthday weekend but were undecided on the lavish buffet. During a truly terrible night, I caught myself clenching my jaw in an early hours stupor.  I must have slept but it was in such small snatches I might as well not have even tried!

After Boris stated crime fell 14% and the Home Office admitted it excluded fraud and computer scams, the UKSA sad they were misleading.  Challenged on Sunday Morning, Kwasi Modo said they meant street crime like burglary and violence.  Tell that to Leeds people in fear of being stabbed!

Shaun Bailey’s Lavish Buffet

*Scope of inquiry:15th May 2020, garden party; 27th Nov, leaving do; 10th Dec; gathering at DoE, 15th Dec, Xmas quiz.

The Dirty Dozen: 20th May 2020, garden party;  18th June, a gathering; 19th June, Boris’ birthday party; 13th Nov, 2 gatherings; 17th Dec, 3 gatherings; 18th Dec, ‘end of term’ party; 14th Jan 2021, a gathering; 16th April, 2 gatherings.

Excluded from report: 14th Dec; Bailey’s lavish buffet, Met speaking to 2 attendees; 16th Dec, DoT party.

**(Department of agriculture, environment & rural affairs)

References:

i. My haigas: https://wordpress.com/posts/mondaymorninghaiga.wordpress.com

ii. My Cool Places blog: https://hepdenerose.wordpress.com/

iii. The Sue Gray Report: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1051374/Investigation_into_alleged_gatherings_on_government_premises_during_Covid_restrictions_-_Update.pdf