They were happy to give space to a report sent to Boris's father by his Master in College at Eton (when BoJo was 17) stating: Boris really has adopted a disgracefully cavalier attitude to his classical studies. It is a question of priorities, which most of his colleagues have no difficulty in sorting out. Boris sometimes seems affronted when criticised for what amounts to a gross failure of responsibility (and surprised at the same time that he was not appointed Captain of the School for next half). I think he honestly believes it is churlish of us not to regard him as an exception, one who should be free of the network of obligation which binds everyone else.
As the boy, so the man - cavalier, gross failure of responsibility, believes himself to be free of the network of obligations, narcissistic, lacking in morals and scruples. "Wait", you say. "Lacking morals and scruples?" Indeed, sacked - if you didn't know - by his newspaper, the Times, when he was a journalist in the late 1980s for fabricating (i.e. making stuff up, including supposed quotes). Some might call that lying. Oh, and sacked again, this time by the Leader of the Conservatives after he had become an MP in the early 1990s, for lying about an extra-marital affair.
"But he has competencies", you urge. "He was Foreign Secretary." Indeed he was, the worst in living memory according to insiders at the Foreign Office. Not the least of his many gaffes in the role was the ill-advised statement he made about Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, which gave the Iranian government grounds for arresting and imprisoning her on a charge of espionage. She is still being held captive in Tehran five years on. When a leading FO diplomat was quizzed about Johnson he observed "...the thing you learn about Boris - everything is always about him." When pressed about Johnson as a possible PM he merely said "If he was not expected to run anything, it could work."
And so to Downing Street, with his last mistress now his wife, in a flat the cost of refurbishing which is still shrouded in confusion, and those lockdown busting parties which he said didn't happen. And if they did happen, he wasn't at them. And if he was at them, it was only once and for a few moments. And if it was more than once, they were work events with wine (a lot of it) and cheese (plenty of that). And never in his private flat, except on occasions. And never with people other than his immediate social bubble, though there is plenty of evidence to the contrary.
So the liar Boris Johnson, after weeks of winging it, has finally been served with papers by the Metropolitan Police asking him to account for his actions on a number of specified occasions in a number of specified locations to help them with their enquiries into how many times he broke the law - that is, rules his own government imposed upon the rest of us. I hope it will confirm how many lies upon lies Boris the Fly has peddled. May he never be allowed to escape the consequences.
My poem on topic...
Ambushed By Cake
(warning: may contain Nut-Nuts)
I didn't think it was a party, just another
work affair with cake and champagne.
Yes, there were thirty people there
including my wife and the woman
who's re-designing our flat. Am I
paying for that? But I didn't think
it was a party. There were no strippers,
there was no cocaine, it was all very low-key.
All my affairs are always work affairs
with cake and champagne, just ask Carrie.
But I didn't think it was a party. I didn't think.
And now this. Those ridiculous headlines
in the press: Ambushed by Cake at Partygate.
The Telegraph and Mail for God's sake.
They're supposed to be on my side,
to have my back, the thankless hacks,
after all the work events they've been invited to!
At least it's clear it's not my fault. None of this.
I've seen those movies in which a hapless
mobster gets blown away by the gunman
hiding in the gateau - we have more class.
They all stood round me, smiling faces,
glasses raised, singing Happy Birthday
like I told everyone to do while washing their hands.
Is that what they were doing, metaphorically?
The ungrateful bastards, hoisting poor Boris
with his own petard. Have they no shame?
Did they forget I nearly died for them?
Fuck it! I lied to get here and I'll lie to stay.
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
30 comments:
Magnificent poem Steve, absolutely magnificent!
I love your Cake poem – spot on!
Has he not gone yet? The man's a complete drongo and you've caught him well.
It's good to be reminded of the man's inappropriateness for high office, but the concerning thing is millions must have been aware of this and backed him anyway! That truly flags up the shit state of British politics over the last decade and the way voters have been manipulated by lies.
As a woman who has more than once been ambushed by several chocolate biscuits I do feel some sympathy for Boris.
When reading Ambushed By Cake I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. It's brilliant but makes me so angry.
Let's get my flit can out!
Loving the latest epithet for Johnson. He's always winged it. Time to swat the bastard now. Top poem la!
You've nailed that! "Did they forget I nearly died for them?" is a brilliant touch. π
I thought the poem was great, Steve. Very cleverly done. Someone needs to break ranks but as Andrew Marr has observed, "the cabinet are sitting tight. They know they are there because of Johnson and they know his vengeful instincts."
Ambushed is a powerful satire and I am desperate for Johnson and his cronies to get their comeuppance. But I'm equally concerned that our whole political and electoral system should get reformed. It's too corrupt and self-serving.
You've got Johnson to a T. π Even John Bercow, who has known 12 PMs in his time in the Commons, says Johnson is the worst he's ever known and not fit for high office.
Although I live abroad, I have despaired of the UK's political process in the last few years. The fact that a man like Johnson could ever become prime minister tells me the system has gone wrong. The man is a perversion. I hope the people that put him in power, really just to further their own ends, will recognise their error sooner rather than later.
An excellent piece, Steve, properly savage and deserving of the widest possible audience. I will share with my circle of friends. The poem is first class (unlike its subject).
Ha ha ha, brilliant poem Steve. And ha ha ha, Johnson taking advice from his lawyers before he replies to the Met.
Did the fucker fill in his questionaire for the Met?
You captured the 'voice' superbly Steve- FUNNY - and a breeze of a read.
Thanks for the article too- reports can unwittingly say much about a person!
I think I commented on one of your Brexit-related blogs a few years ago that I had voted Leave and soon regretted it. Unlike you (and unlike many, I suppose) I wasn't clued up on Johnson. He just seemed to have the energy to get things done. I didn't know he'd written two versions of the same article for the Telegraph, one arguing for Brexit and one opposing it, and only decided which one to submit when his advisors told him what his best route to power was. He's shown himself to be a shifty, self-serving rogue. Your blog is very revealing of his true nature and your funny poem does it for me. I am very angry that he was not forced to resign and I hope his days in Downing Street are numbered.
Thanks for sharing Steve. I agree with you entirely and now a war seems inevitable. Boris has landed on his feet again.
Well, ye-ees, Steve, but...THE VACCINE ROLLOUT. WORLDBEATING. UNPRECEDENTED.
Rinse and repeat. Ad libitum, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.
Oh, and "I think the public want us to get on with the job" or "I think the public want to put this behind them".
And of course, the ultimate deus ex machina: "But, Corbyn".
Deep in your heart, you know it works.
If only...poems could topple Tories. Bravo Steve for the article and the satire. Brilliant that. π
I watched Johnson on TV earlier - so jingoistic even on this darkest of days: GB the first to send advisors and weapons to Ukraine, GB the first to arrange shipment of medical supplies etc etc. FFS. No wonder we've become so disliked around the world in the last few years. A gunman in a cake might have been a better idea.
Send in a SWAT team! Excellent poem Steve.
As you say those comments about his school days sum him up perfectly.
More outright political poems such as this are needed.
I'm waiting for Johnson to come out and call Putin a lying, narcissistic, power-crazed egotist lacking in morals and scruples! π
Your poem is terrific and your forensic piece on BoJo is spot on. (Well done Blackpool today as well.)
It may be an uncharitable thought, but I suspect Johnson is pleased this war has come along when it has. Your poem is great. He's not a nice man.
Never mind Partygate. Come on Johnson. Why did you refuse to publish the 2019 report into Russian meddling in British politics (specifically the Konservative Party)? You've been groomed by oligarchs, you corrupt bastard. £2 million in donations is it?
It does appear that the fly Boris Johnson has had a lucky escape - for the time being. It would be a change for the better if the major papers' sudden new found objectivity regarding the administration were to continue, but I suspect they are only biding their time before they can big up a viable successor at Tory leader.
No punches pulled there. Allowing for general ignorance it's just about understandable that he got to where he wanted, but he's been such a devious, lying omnishambles of a PM that I'm surprised and bitterly disappointed he's not been kicked out (several times).
Johnson: found to have broken the law and been fined by Met Police; found to have misled (i.e. lied to) Parliament. According to constitutional precedent he should resign forthwith, and if he refuses then he should be unseated.
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