Monday 30 April 2018

Government ?

Oh dear, what a mess!
When Mrs May went to the country last year to get a better bargaining position for Brexit she came a bad cropper. It’s been downhill all the way since then.
Much of this unhappy saga controlling the headlines right now is not so much about immigration as poor management.
I feel sorry for our late Home Secretary. I suspect none of this was really her fault. I’m afraid the real culprit must be our Prime Minister.
It really is time to call it a day surely?
In order to stay in office she is now surrounded by people like Gove and Boris.
And for Gove to try to speak up for Amber Rudd only made a bad situation worse.
Their response to all of this is clearly why their attacks on Corbyn have doubled over the last week.
It’s all very sad.
Who knew what,has long ceased to be the nub of the mess.
It no longer seems valid as we now realise that they were all either lying or inept to a dangerous degree.
May's disappointment at the polls the last time she went to the country to ask us all for support must be the main reason why it’s not going to be repeated.
But the culprits in all of this are those who pushed Cameron into the Brexit poll. Since then we have been governed by people who are desperately trying to make sense of what we do in the future when we stand alone.
None of the portents look good just now.
But no more lies please...it just makes it worse when you are found out.



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

1 comment:

UKViewer said...

The whole of politics is in a mess. Tory mistakes, Labout Anti-Semitism and failure to deal with it. Even the bloke banned from the Party last week, says that he still enjoys the support of Mr Corbyn,

Now the House of Lords, decides that getting rid of Brexit by tying the hands of the Government is a good thing. They talk of Parliament being sovereighn, but there is no such thing. The Queen is the head of state, and Parliament is the instrument of her Governance.

I wonder what would happen if the Queen decided not to sign the Brexit bills into law, or alternatively, dissolve parliament and call another general election, combined with a referendum on how we should be governed. Do we really need a second, unelected house, with no democratic mandate?

The scandal is that the politicians who are elected to govern, and too divided on dogmatic party lines, to actually take the interests of the country into account. Come the Revolution?