Bojo on good form

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
Correct
 
Dominos.jpg


^_^
 
D

Deleted member 49

Guest
Johnson today....
" we lead Europe in vaccines "
fact check 19th of 30
"our economy is thriving "
fact check 74th of 107
"people are better off"
fact check
Highest inflation in G20 , lowest wages in G20 , lowest pensions in OECD 100 .
It is painful.
Fecks me off even more he was at the local college here 😡
 

Mugshot

Über Member
Johnson today....
" we lead Europe in vaccines "
fact check 19th of 30
"our economy is thriving "
fact check 74th of 107
"people are better off"
fact check
Highest inflation in G20 , lowest wages in G20 , lowest pensions in OECD 100 .
It is painful.
Fecks me off even more he was at the local college here 😡

Yeah but while he’s screwing me over at least he’s sticking it to the lefties too.
I may have won fark all, but other people are even worse off, so, you know, swings and roundabouts.
 
Two stories in one here, the demonstrably corrupt Johnson and then the populist media doing as they’re told and burying it.

CC2B4E9C-6CEC-44E8-84E9-0894D84F4C1A.jpeg


You might have thought it one of the scoops of the year – the allegation that when he was foreign secretary, Boris Johnson wanted to install his then-lover Carrie Symonds as his chief of staff on a salary of at least £100,000 a year, before senior colleagues made it clear that such a “flagrant abuse of ethics” would have been unacceptable.
Yet the story was turned down by one leading newspaper, then picked up and printed by another before disappearing altogether.
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.

Walters quoted one of Johnson’s senior foreign office staffers as saying: “An illicit relationship with Carrie was none of our business. Making her chief of staff was definitely our business. Our job was to protect him and we knew what was going on between them, and it would have been an insane risk to let him do it.” Another staffer was quoted as saying that, apart from anything else, Symonds was “relatively inexperienced” and the feeling was she wasn’t the “right person” for the job.

Walters stated that three of Johnson’s aides – including Ben Gascoigne, now one of his deputy chiefs of staffs and a friend of Wheeler, threatened to resign over the proposed appointment. Walters got the story into the Timeson page five. MailOnline, conscious that they couldn’t ignore such a big story once it was out in the public domain, duly followed it up.

Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.

The ministerial code – which Johnson felt the need to update last month – states clearly that “working relationships with civil servants, colleagues and staff should be proper and appropriate.”

Walters ended his piece by saying he had approached No 10, Mrs Johnson and Gascoigne, but all had “declined to comment”.

https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/bo...-carrie-symonds-a-100000-downing-street-role/
 

Mugshot

Über Member
Two stories in one here, the demonstrably corrupt Johnson and then the populist media doing as they’re told and burying it.

View attachment 1467

You might have thought it one of the scoops of the year – the allegation that when he was foreign secretary, Boris Johnson wanted to install his then-lover Carrie Symonds as his chief of staff on a salary of at least £100,000 a year, before senior colleagues made it clear that such a “flagrant abuse of ethics” would have been unacceptable.
Yet the story was turned down by one leading newspaper, then picked up and printed by another before disappearing altogether.
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.

Walters quoted one of Johnson’s senior foreign office staffers as saying: “An illicit relationship with Carrie was none of our business. Making her chief of staff was definitely our business. Our job was to protect him and we knew what was going on between them, and it would have been an insane risk to let him do it.” Another staffer was quoted as saying that, apart from anything else, Symonds was “relatively inexperienced” and the feeling was she wasn’t the “right person” for the job.

Walters stated that three of Johnson’s aides – including Ben Gascoigne, now one of his deputy chiefs of staffs and a friend of Wheeler, threatened to resign over the proposed appointment. Walters got the story into the Timeson page five. MailOnline, conscious that they couldn’t ignore such a big story once it was out in the public domain, duly followed it up.

Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.

The ministerial code – which Johnson felt the need to update last month – states clearly that “working relationships with civil servants, colleagues and staff should be proper and appropriate.”

Walters ended his piece by saying he had approached No 10, Mrs Johnson and Gascoigne, but all had “declined to comment”.

https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/bo...-carrie-symonds-a-100000-downing-street-role/

Yeah, but what about something somebody in the Labour party might have done?
 

icowden

Squire
The Daily Mail was offered it, but turned it down, with the tipster being told it didn’t accord with the newspaper’s “general point of view”. Rupert Murdoch’s Times was next on the tipster’s list. Their journalist, Simon Walters, was put on the story and he promptly identified four allies of Johnson who confirmed it to him.
The story got juicier still: Johnson was still married at the time to Marina Wheeler, but his staff became aware of his affair with when he was caught with Symonds in his Commons office.

Walters quoted one of Johnson’s senior foreign office staffers as saying: “An illicit relationship with Carrie was none of our business. Making her chief of staff was definitely our business. Our job was to protect him and we knew what was going on between them, and it would have been an insane risk to let him do it.” Another staffer was quoted as saying that, apart from anything else, Symonds was “relatively inexperienced” and the feeling was she wasn’t the “right person” for the job.

Walters stated that three of Johnson’s aides – including Ben Gascoigne, now one of his deputy chiefs of staffs and a friend of Wheeler, threatened to resign over the proposed appointment. Walters got the story into the Timeson page five. MailOnline, conscious that they couldn’t ignore such a big story once it was out in the public domain, duly followed it up.

Johnson was in Kyiv when he heard that the story was about to break and quickly forgot all about his friend Volodymyr Zelensky’s problems. He got his staff on the case and the story was dropped from later editions of today’s Times and the story promptly disappeared, too, from MailOnline.
Private Eye have a little bit of insight into this. Ashcroft is mentioned in the article. Ashcroft and Dacre are very good chums indeed with Ashcroft having helped Dacre's son set up Marlowe which is worth about 150 million of which two thirds is Ashcrofts. Ashcroft also has a special relationship with Rothermere, so nothing even vaguely negative is going to appear in the Daily Fail as it's Ashcroft's pet newspaper.
 
Boris Johnson breaks promise to deliver 100 million Covid vaccines to poor countries.

Government accused of ‘profiteering’ by charging countries for surplus vaccines through the aid budget.

The prime minister pledged to parliament last year that the vaccines would not be funded by taking money from the existing aid budget – a vow he appears to have broken.


https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...on-covid-vaccines-aid-donations-b2103478.html
 

mudsticks

Squire
I give you the totally newsworthy article from the Daily Mail.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...er-spotted-leaving-London-home-boyfriend.html

They have even priced up her modest clothing. I’m sure Carrie doesn’t wear such cheap rags.

Get The Look.


Imagine..

Bringing up your kids to respect the truth, to have integrity .

Even to aspire to make a positive difference in the world..

And then, after all that, they throw it all over to become a DM 'journalist'

🙁
 
Top Bottom