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Boris Watch - Thread 1

488 replies

chomalungma · 17/12/2019 19:11

Well, it's been done for Trump since he got elected.
No doubt some people will complain it's on AIBU - but it's a place with traffic.

So let's use this to keep an eye on the changes under Boris.

First Thing:

Boris introduces clause in the withdrawal agreement so the UK must leave with WTO rules if there is no trade agreement with the EU by the end of 2020

www.theguardian.com/business/2019/dec/17/pound-slides-to-pre-election-levels-in-wake-of-bid-to-outlaw-brexit-extension

Feel free to comment and add things that you notice changing. The Trump threads are at 97 now.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
7
goldierocks · 23/01/2020 06:49

Parents who lose a child will receive two weeks paid bereavement leave under new government rules.

Under the new law, parents who lose a child under the age of 18 will be able to take leave as either a single block of two weeks, or as two separate blocks of one week each across the first year after the death.

It will be known as Jack's Law, in memory of Jack Herd, whose mother Lucy has been campaigning for reform since her 23-month-old son Jack drowned in 2010.

RIP little Jack.

lonelyplanetmum · 23/01/2020 07:30

Twice this week the top item on the BBC radio news has been a focus on NHS failings. First the cost of negligence claims and now mortality rates in a Kent baby unit.

It is almost as if some one has triggered a press campaign to slowly weaken our love for the NHS. Probably BU though.

HeIenaDove · 27/01/2020 17:47

www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jan/26/boris-johnson-grenfell-inquiry-benita-mehra?CMP=share_btn_tw

Boris Johnson either doesn’t have a grip on Grenfell - or he doesn’t care
Seraphima Kennedy
The fact the prime minister saw no conflict of interest in Benita Mehra’s appointment to the inquiry shows his indifference

t is a scandal that should never have happened. The second phase of the Grenfell Tower inquiry opens tomorrow, after the exposure of a conflict of interest that was not resolved until families threatened to withdraw from the process. The appointment of engineer Benita Mehra to the inquiry panel, linked as she was to the cladding firm Arconic, undermined trust and could have left the inquiry’s phase 2 findings open to legal challenge. Mehra has now resigned.

Yet there are still serious questions to answer about the government’s appointment process to the inquiry panel, the due diligence carried out by the prime minister, and the initial failure to reverse the appointment once the conflict was exposed in the Guardian. “The government should never have put families in this situation,” said Grenfell United, the group representing many bereaved and survivors. “They failed to carry out basic checks and understand the importance and sensitivities around a fair and proper process.”

Mehra’s appointment was announced in a letter from Boris Johnson to the inquiry chairman on 23 December. The timing of the announcement – two days before Christmas – struck many as suspicious. It emerged that Mehra had been president of the Women’s Engineering Society in 2018, when the association received £71,000 in funding from the charitable arm of Arconic – which manufactured the cladding used at Grenfell, a material the inquiry found to have been the primary cause of the spread of the fire, which killed 72 people.

Concerns were raised directly with the prime minister, who said he would look into it; but neither Johnson, nor the team around him, seems to fully understand the level of anger and distrust. Until last Friday, the Cabinet Office repeated the line that Arconic’s donation to Mehra’s association was “unrelated to the issues being considered

We should take a moment to reflect on how serious this failure was. A solemn judicial process taking place in the interests of justice and public safety after the deadliest fire since the second world war is starting its most important phase of evidence-gathering compromised by the prime minister. He and his team either do not have a full grip on the Grenfell brief, or they do not care. The letter accepting Mehra’s resignation reiterated that the Cabinet Office “continue to believe that there is no conflict of interest that would have prevented you from taking part in the inquiry”.

As the inquiry opens, this is more than a slap in the face to families who watched flames rip through Arconic’s cladding knowing their loved ones were trapped inside. The failure to see such a glaring conflict is exactly why the inquiry needs to ensure absolute impartiality and transparency, and to demonstrate utter fearlessness at getting to the how and why of what happened

The government must now urgently try to repair trust in the inquiry by finding a suitable replacement. “The government promised two panel members and must now urgently find a new panelist, to bring expertise on community relations to the inquiry,” said Grenfell United. Grenfell has always been about the indifference of those in power to the lives of ordinary people, who put profit before safety. It should be a matter of deep concern that Grenfell United have also raised concerns “about the indifference shown towards bereaved and survivors by the secretary of the inquiry, Mark Fisher … We need to know that the inquiry team will change how it deals with families.” While the report on the first phase was welcomed by families, the inquiry didn’t get parts of the process right, such as communication, and dealing with questions from the families.

Advertisement

This week, the inquiry is expected to hear opening statements from many of the corporate core participants, as well as from lawyers for the families. Over the next 18 months it will scrutinise “the design of the cladding and the choice of materials, the testing and certification of those materials, and the role of central and local government in promoting fire safety”. Senior representatives from Kensington and Chelsea borough council, the tenant management organisation, the cladding companies, government ministers past and present, and the office of the Mayor of London (and let’s not forget that Johnson himself was Mayor of London when cuts were made to the fire service), are all expected to give evidence. Grenfell cuts right to the heart of government

All the Grenfell families want is a fair chance to let the evidence determine where responsibility lies. The inquiry’s report into phase 1 was welcomed – it must now show itself to be fearless at getting to the truth

HeIenaDove · 27/01/2020 18:34

www.24housing.co.uk/news/government-wont-be-drawn-on-white-paper-release/

Government won’t be drawn on White Paper release
Commons question over timescale gets only a “quickly as possible” answer

Pile of documents, files, and papers
Government still won’t be drawn on the Social Housing White Paper with a timescale as vague as “quickly as possible” offered to the latest question over its publication.

Speculation suggests the Paper will be ready for release in the wake of budget.

But if that’s the case, Housing Minister Esther McVey gave nothing away responding to a written question on the Paper’s projected time scale from Labour’s Barry Sheerman.

“We are working to bring forward the White Paper as quickly as possible,” said McVey.

Labour’s Alex Cunningham got little advance on this stance with his questions on the national model tenancy agreement.

Asked what plans MHCLG had to review the national model tenancy agreement and publish the agreement, McVey said this would happen “shortly” and on the Gov.uk website.

“While we will continue to update this document as required, we do not intend to conduct a fuller review, as the Government is planning a fuller overhaul of the assured shorthold tenancy framework through the Renters’ Reform Bill,” she said.

That narrowed the scope for Cunningham’s question on MHCLG plans to include a consultation process in the review of the agreement.

McVey said feedback on proposed changes would be sought from “a small group of partners” ahead of publication

LakieLady · 27/01/2020 19:18

Nice to see Johnson rewarding the Red Wall for switching to the
Tories.

www.theguardian.com/society/2020/jan/25/former-red-wall-areas-could-lose-millions-in-council-funding-review

DuncinToffee · 30/01/2020 08:09

Good trade deals needed for the car industry as the UK car production sank to its lowest in nearly a decade.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-51300835

goldierocks · 30/01/2020 09:26

Minimum Funding Levels for All Schools

Every secondary school has been guaranteed at least £5,000 per pupil next year, and every primary school at least £3,750 per pupil, thanks to new legislation laid in Parliament (30 January).

Local authorities will now be required by law to make sure every school receives the full amount of the minimum levels of funding pledged for each pupil. Funding per pupil for primary schools will rise to £4,000 the following year.

Previously, local authorities were not required to allocate the money for schools in this way - with many schools across the country falling below the minimum levels of funding for each pupil.

These new regulations mean that all local authorities will now have to pass on the required levels of funding to every school in their area, which will help make sure that no school loses out simply because of their location or historic local rules.

The new funding includes £780 million in 2020-21 to support children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND).

Parents will now also be able to find out how much extra funding their local school will attract next year using a new, easy-to-use website launched today, which allows anyone to look up allocations under the National Funding Formula for schools in England for 2020-21.

National Funding Formula Tables

Jason118 · 30/01/2020 14:10

And the money is coming from where? Already strapped for cash local authorities, or additional government funding to start to undo the considerable shortfall built up since the Conservatives came to power?

Clavinova · 30/01/2020 14:39

UK car production sank to its lowest in nearly a decade

And a 22 year low for German car production announced 3 weeks ago;

www.thelocal.de/20200106/plunging-german-car-production-heralds-year-of-transformation

Iamagree · 03/02/2020 17:50

Now Cummings is trying the Trump tactics of bullying the press and choosing who is "allowed" to report on what No. 10 are up to!
www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/feb/03/political-journalists-boycott-no-10-briefing-after-reporter-ban

Just glad the other journalists stood up to this attempt at manipulation

lonelyplanetmum · 03/02/2020 19:54

Absolutely shocking- unprecedented.

It was Lee Cain, not Cummings/ allegedly Johnson’s most senior communications adviser, who tried to exclude reporters from the Mirror, the i, HuffPost, PoliticsHome, the Independent and others.

Worse than Trump- muffling the press to avoid any scrutiny. Shocking.

The opposite of what a moral responsible government would do. Yet millions think this is ok presumably.

Dusty01 · 03/02/2020 23:33

I think some might think this is OK. Comments I'm seeing on Twitter are that the press deserve it ... that doesn't make sense to me.

I think millions won't even realise that this is happening.

I understand why the Mirror was barred, but why the others? Have they been particularly anti government. And why was the Guardian invited in?

DuncinToffee · 07/02/2020 09:10

It all seem to happen on the quiet a bit didn't it?

Meanwhile
Johnson criticised by watchdog over universal credit claim
www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51404230

Mistlewoeandwhine · 07/02/2020 09:15

Even the Daily Mail had an article criticising the Tories for only allowing selected journalists!

yolofish · 24/02/2020 15:50

Anyone seen the PM lately??

yolofish · 06/03/2020 13:40

Apparently not another COBRA meeting until Monday. He must be exhausted after doing a bit of media stuff yesterday. Lazy git.

BewitchedBotheredandBewildered · 06/03/2020 23:45

I lurked here for a while when you all started the thread.

Unbelievable that 3 months into this man's premiership, with a huge majority, a group of highly motivated people have only managed less than 500 comments.

What a way to run a country.

He's been on holiday more than he's been on duty, and will be on paternity leave in the summer, so he tells us.

He just might have to step up to deal with the virus.

Unless of course he gets it.

Odds?

yolofish · 07/03/2020 17:35

yy bewitched. Odds on Boris getting corona? well, he's been to a hospital and shaken hands with lots of people, so that's a downer. OTH he's pictured on the front page of the Torygraph today washing his hands while visiting some science lab (private, natch, cba to find out who funds it) so perhaps he'll escape?

But it's the w/e, we can't expect our Dear Leader to work I suppose.

yolofish · 07/03/2020 17:54

Oh, I see he and Carrie have been to the rugby. How nice.

DuncinToffee · 07/03/2020 18:53

Is that why the meeting with sporting bodies and broadcasters is not until Monday?

Part-timer Johnson

chomalungma · 07/03/2020 21:15

Nice to see this thread again.

It's been an interesting start. Now we have had the floods and the virus.

OP posts:
yolofish · 07/03/2020 21:18

and the PM is hardly overworking in the face of the current crises, let alone the other elephant in the room, Brexit.

yolofish · 08/03/2020 23:14

Heckled and called a traitor in Bewdley (sp?) today. Well, it was probaby near somewhere he was having lunch anyway...

Clavinova · 09/03/2020 09:07

Heckled and called a traitor in Bewdley (sp?) today.

The Guardian have a video clip - heckler described as; "[man in crowd]" - just the one heckler then?

www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/mar/08/boris-johnson-heckled-as-a-traitor-while-visiting-flood-hit-worcestershire

Well, it was probably near somewhere he was having lunch anyway...

Afternoon tea in Wales?

6th March
"Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressing the Welsh Conservative Party Conference in the Llangollen Pavilion in North Wales".... "Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised Wales will “have what it needs” to rebuild after major floods."

www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/pm-pledges-floods-help-for-wales-39021915.html

Part-timer Johnson

This is just the new [false] narrative from the left though isn't it?

Just looking at reports from Wednesday, Thursday and Friday last week he seems pretty busy to me - probably some I've missed or not reported:

Weds 4th March
"Questions in the House of Commons to Prime Minister Boris Johnson from Wednesday 4 March."
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000gdkp

5th March
"Prime Minister Boris Johnson yesterday spoke to French President Emmanuel Macron.They discussed the coronavirus epidemic" ... "and the current situation in Syria."

5th March
"Prime Minister Boris Johnson hosted the Council for Science and Technology at Downing Street."

6th March
"Prime Minister Boris Johnson yesterday met Malta's President Vella at Downing Street."

www.wired-gov.net/wg/news.nsf/articles/PM+call+with+President+Macron+4+March+2020+05032020104300?open

5th March
"Prime Minister Boris Johnson holds joint meeting with his finance minister and the country’s central bank governor on Thursday to discuss the economic response to the coronavirus outbreak"

www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-03-05/johnson-s-meeting-sets-stage-for-coordinated-u-k-virus-response

5th March
"Ahead of the official International Women’s Day on Sunday, the Prime Minister welcomed leading female figures from business, science, and sport, among other sectors, to a special reception in Downing Street" ... "As part of the event, the Prime Minister took part in a panel discussion"...

www.gov.uk/government/news/pm-appoints-new-special-
envoy-for-girls-education-ahead-of-international-womens-day

6th March
"Mr Johnson visited a laboratory in Bedfordshire where the new rapid [coronavirus] test, which could provide results within 20 minutes, is being developed."

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51771116