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Westminster circus is demolishing what’s left of MPs’ reputations

Westminster circus is demolishing what’s left of MPs’ reputations

IF my CV showed a job I’d only been in for 44 days before being forced out, I’d be ashamed to show it and I’m fairly certain potential employers would have trashed it way before the interview stage.

But what does Liz Truss get? 

A yearly allowance of £115,000 for a job she couldn’t manage for even a decent part of her probation period.

And lo and behold Boris Johnson, the previous PM – the least trustworthy and most duplicitous and sleekit ever to have graced the corrupt ‘corridors of power’ is preparing a comeback to rival that of Lazarus.

Behind the scenes though, sensible Tories, realising that Jane and Joe Public would never stand for it, have tried to avoid the need for a massive damage limitation exercise by setting the bar for anyone entering the new leadership contest at 100 votes, in the hope that the divisive former PM will not be able to garner enough.

So, the House of Cards is beginning to collapse, but it has to fall completely and spectacularly.

Why should the new PM be decided by 350-odd Tory MPs? The last incumbent was at least chosen by 172,000 people – granted they were members of the Conservative Party – but what of the wider population?

Ask why the voting population of the UK should be denied a say and the ‘experts’ come back and say we live in a ‘parliamentary democracy’ – where representatives are elected to parliament to make the laws and decisions for the country – and that cannot be changed.

Why not, when the previous incumbent trashed the reputations of many politicians while he and his cabinet helped line their friends’ pockets?

After all, they work for us, not the other way round.

As Dr Andrew Corbett, from the Defence Studies Department at King’s College, London, wrote: “Since Prime Minister Boris Johnson was voted into power, his Government has threatened parliamentary sovereignty, the independence of the judiciary, the independence of the BBC, the individual right to trial by jury and has undermined public confidence in all institutions of governance to an extent never seen before.”

You can’t really argue with that can you?

Nobody in the Tory Party wants a general election, that is patently obvious given the slim chance of them being returned to government.

But they should remember that the people are sovereign and that politicians are only in Westminster for as long as the people vote to keep them there.

Quite simply the next PM (and governing party) should be decided in a general election – it’s that  simple.

That’s enough for a Friday night – the No 10 picture was sent to me via LinkedIn by a colleague and it was too good not to use.

Pip pip.

admin

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