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Downing St parties night before Prince Philip's Funeral

358 replies

buddhasbelly · 13/01/2022 23:14

The telegraph are reporting more parties... The night before Prince Philip's funeral.

  • party spilled out into garden
-someone broke Wilf's swing in tthe garden Confused -someone sent with a suitcase to buy booze from the co-op

When the telegraph of all papers are reporting it, he's surely done for now?

Apologies if another thread on this, couldn't see one

OP posts:
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6
countrygirl99 · 18/01/2022 18:07

I'vecome to the conclusion that those who think Florianus is a Tory intern are wrong. I think she is a highly skilled Labour staffer.

vera99 · 18/01/2022 18:13

We are not allowed to troll hunt so I won't !

Latest News The Mary Rose Museum is trolling our PM - when a museum gets in on the act I think we are nearing peak outrage/ridicule.

twitter.com/MaryRoseMuseum/status/1483446570167287808

Lifeisforliving1 · 18/01/2022 18:17

The issue seems to be whether it was a party or a work event. Were work events even allowed at this time. I'm pretty sure we were still social distancing, working from home if we could etc so surely even a work event with snacks wasn't allowed.

the80sweregreat · 18/01/2022 18:42

@Lifeisforliving1

The issue seems to be whether it was a party or a work event. Were work events even allowed at this time. I'm pretty sure we were still social distancing, working from home if we could etc so surely even a work event with snacks wasn't allowed.
Nothing at all was allowed back then , but if someone had told me I could have had a party I could have done it.. His excuses are just beyond parody to be honest and he helped to make the rules too! Unbelievable excuses.
22itsallnew · 18/01/2022 20:46

He was standing the wrong side of the podium to read it. Maybe that's the problem?

Downing St parties night before Prince Philip's Funeral
vera99 · 18/01/2022 21:58

Iain Dale on LBC saying that 54 letters are in with Graham Brady - he's a gonna....

the80sweregreat · 18/01/2022 22:00

@vera99

Iain Dale on LBC saying that 54 letters are in with Graham Brady - he's a gonna....
How many letters do they need ?
AllPowerfulLizardPerson · 18/01/2022 22:06

How many letters do they need ?

54

15% of the parliamentary party (360 MPs)

the80sweregreat · 18/01/2022 22:10

Ok, so who will take over ?
They are all pretty awful

the80sweregreat · 18/01/2022 22:19

Robert Peston on ITV news said that it's not 54 letters, yet.
He said there are rumors it might be up to that figure by tomorrow.

vera99 · 18/01/2022 22:27

My money's on hunt - Speccie are punting an article - clean pair of hands as well.

Alexander Larman
Will Jeremy Hunt be the next prime minister?
The former Foreign Secretary can do better than a Portillo career

Since he was defeated by Boris Johnson in the 2019 Conservative leadership contest, Jeremy Hunt has had a quieter life as a backbench MP. He has campaigned for the release of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe from custody in Iran and has been an effective and interventionist chairman of the Health Select Committee, often calling out his own party over inadequacies in their response to the Covid crisis and NHS funding. But could he now be preparing for another shot at the top job?

Now that partygate looks increasingly likely to lead to a change of leader, Hunt has told the House magazine that: ‘I won't say my ambition has completely vanished, but it would take a lot to persuade me to put my hat into the ring.’

As the Prime Minister’s nemesis Dominic Cummings tweeted:


‘[This] is SW1 code for: leadership contest is imminent, sign up early if you want a seat in Cabinet, am on phone to donors and getting office set up, there has to be one non-Brexit nutter in last two’.
Hunt is one of the few high-profile members of the Tory party who could be said to have had ‘a good pandemic’. As a result, Hunt has largely dispelled the negative image he engendered when he was health secretary in the Cameron and May administrations. He is regarded as one of the few grown-up figures in the party and, crucially, has reassured traditional shire Conservatives that there is at least one ‘big beast’ on the backbenches who represents a form of One National Toryism – as opposed to the more Brexity variety espoused by Johnson and his cabinet.

Most popular
Robert Peston
The bombshell email that could spell disaster for Boris
The bombshell email that could spell disaster for Boris
In his interview with House, Hunt offered the Prime Minister some qualified support for his Brexit achievements and the vaccine roll-out (‘we have to give Boris great credit’), but nonetheless stated that ‘I think the issues around 'partygate' are substantive issues. They are important issues and we're now waiting for the results of the independent inquiry to get to the bottom of what happened.’

So how would Hunt fare in a post-Johnson contest? His likely rivals would be Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss, and he faces the dual disadvantage of being a ‘traditional’ white, upper-middle class public schoolboy and Oxford graduate (compared to Sunak and Truss’s more unorthodox backgrounds). He was also a committed Remainer. By comparison, Truss’s previous support for the Remain side has now been erased from history; she is now one of the government’s most enthusiastic born-again Brexiteers.

And yet, it's not all bad news for Hunt. The former health secretary has an obvious appeal in constituencies such as Chesham and Amersham – lost to the Lib Dems last year – in that he can present himself as a professional, experienced politician who is ready to take the Conservative party out of its current reputational mire. Hunt is the type of politician who can re-establish something of the combination of economic sense and social liberalism of the Cameron era, if that is what the Tory party is interested in.

There are more twists ahead in the current administration’s travails, and Hunt would be foolish to set himself up as a Portillo figure, measuring up the curtains in 10 Downing Street before Johnson has been ousted from office. It remains unclear, too, whether there is much appetite for managerial party leaders after the departure of the flamboyant incumbent. But if the public are sick of endless drama and revelation, an unexciting but competent ‘safe pair of hands’ like Hunt may well become the next prime minister.

Florianus · 19/01/2022 07:56

So how would Hunt fare in a post-Johnson contest? His likely rivals would be Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss, and he faces the dual disadvantage of being a ‘traditional’ white, upper-middle class public schoolboy and Oxford graduate (compared to Sunak and Truss’s more unorthodox backgrounds)

Much greater than either of those disadvantages is the danger that the electorate may remember Hunt as the long-serving health secretary who progressively deprived the NHS of funds for year upon year, famously fining cash-strapped hospitals for missing unrealistic financial targets.
Whether or not re-inventing himself as the nice guy of the Health and Social Care select committee is enough to erase that memory from the collective conscience is a matter for some debate I should have thought - but I guess he might be better than Truss the Cheese or Govey.

Notonthestairs · 19/01/2022 08:19

I'm not convinced there will be 54 letters. I guess we will see over the next few days!

I genuinely believe a lot of this could have be avoided if he'd offered a swift and unqualified apology before Christmas with a few heads on sticks.

There would have still been anger but it would have been time limited and his cabinet could have pointed to swift action (only after they were caught etc but even so) to defend him.

This mismanagement of the PR baffles me.

Florianus · 19/01/2022 08:32

Notonthestairs
I'm not convinced there will be 54 letters

Nor am I. Tory MPs know that Johnson, despite all his faults, wins elections and gets them their jobs. The risks of another PM like Theresa May, who went for a walk, had a brain-fart and caused many of them to lose their jobs are considerable.

OperationRinka · 19/01/2022 08:42

Johnson won elections. Past tense. He's now an electoral liability according to all the polling, and the thing about landslide electoral wins in the UK is that it lands you with a whole load of MPs with precarious majorities who are extremely sensitive to anything that threatens that.

DollyParton2 · 19/01/2022 08:53

Sablesmug but Labour have been just as bad for expenses scandals -as keeps coming out!

the80sweregreat · 19/01/2022 09:27

They all need cleaning up , many Labour MPs also had some dodgy expenses too back then ( didn't one put in a receipt for a porn movie for her husband whilst staying in a hotel ?)
Not as much as moat cleaning or duck ponds , but still wrong of course.
Whoever gets in ends up in some kind of trouble and all governments end in failure, Tony Blair will never be forgiven for the Iraq war and those ramifications are still around now. David Cameron and the brexit referendum. Those arguments will be around forever too.
When will we ever get a government who works for the people ? I'm old and I don't know many who haven't been embroiled in something dodgy or immoral.
I'm done with all of them to be honest :(

vera99 · 19/01/2022 09:30

The stark reality of Johnson is stumbling from crisis to crisis much of it self-inflicted will focus Tory mp minds. It's a given and a lifelong track record of chaos. If he lasts a fortnight I will eat my pork pie hat.

Sky News reporter saying she has had numerous Tory MPs confirming the whips have given up, there's simply no whipping going on, and at least another 11 letters have gone into the 1922 committee so far this morning.

Pippa Crerar
@PippaCrerar
One Tory MP tells us: "It’s not Operation Big Dog, it’s Operation Massive C**k. I don’t know where it goes from here...”

Another adds: “It will be the newer MPs who bring down the PM. I have never seen anything like it."

PMQs should be entertaining today.

Blossomtoes · 19/01/2022 09:38

@Florianus

Notonthestairs I'm not convinced there will be 54 letters

Nor am I. Tory MPs know that Johnson, despite all his faults, wins elections and gets them their jobs. The risks of another PM like Theresa May, who went for a walk, had a brain-fart and caused many of them to lose their jobs are considerable.

You thought there were only six letters yesterday. Johnson doesn’t win elections; he’s won one. There’s no way on this earth he’d win another. Personally I hope he clings on until the next GE so the Tories are soundly defeated.
countrygirl99 · 19/01/2022 09:40

The reason there aren't 54 letters is because anyone half sensible wants to be the leader after next.

Blossomtoes · 19/01/2022 09:57

@countrygirl99

The reason there aren't 54 letters is because anyone half sensible wants to be the leader after next.
It’s highly likely there will be more than 54 letters by the end of the day. A lot of back benchers have seen the light - or had it shone in their eyes by their constituents.
vera99 · 19/01/2022 10:12

As far as betting goes Sunak is way out in front. He always comes over as a bit of a robot and is reputedly the richest man to ever be in Parliament. He's a man of the people with a Yorkshire country pile, a four-bed Kensington mews house and an apartment in Santa Monica California - he will play all that down of course. But we do know he likes coke ...

www.oddschecker.com/politics/british-politics/next-conservative-leader

www.thelondoneconomic.com/politics/in-this-together-sunak-gets-planning-permission-for-pool-as-he-cuts-uc-290893/

vera99 · 19/01/2022 10:14

(((Dan Hodges)))
@DPJHodges
·
4m
Tory MP: “Boris broke down in tears in front of several of us yesterday. He kept saying sorry. He knows he’s finished”.
(((Dan Hodges)))
@DPJHodges
·
10m
Tory MP: “The names will be in by 5.00 pm. It’s over”.

the80sweregreat · 19/01/2022 10:32

I read only seven letters today , but that was on bbc teletext at 6am.
I still don't think there will be enough. Just my opinion though.
I'm generally wrong ..

vera99 · 19/01/2022 10:33

Is Teletext still going - that takes me back ...

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