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hatrack

(60,920 posts)
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 07:11 AM Jul 2024

Clueless, Arrogant And Petulant: Liz Truss Leaves The Stage Just As She Had Occupied It

Very early on Friday morning, Liz Truss, a politician whose weapons-grade inability to read any room almost bankrupted the nation, appeared unable even to choreograph her own demise. The last minutes of her time in office as an MP were as clumsily inept as much of the previous 14 years of vapid careerism. To begin with, after a brief recount in her South West Norfolk constituency, her fellow candidates were kept waiting on stage for an age while, it appeared, the former PM was outside in a Range Rover with her expensive security detail presumably debating if she might stay behind the tinted glass and avoid the fatal moment for ever.

When she did finally appear through an unexpected side door, following a slow handclap, she stood with characteristic awkwardness to hear the fact that she had somehow, in five catastrophic years – or 49 fatal days – translated a 26,000 Tory majority into a 640-vote defeat. Her victorious Labour opponent, Terry Jermy, gave a heartfelt speech about his win, and the stage seemed set for Truss to offer some kind of response, or explanation, or at least the traditional thank you to tellers and supporters. She looked panicky for half a moment, perhaps with this thought in mind, before scuttling away ungraciously. Afterwards I asked the velvet-breeched high sheriff who had conducted the announcement if Truss had indicated that she wanted to speak. “No,” he said. “I think she just wasn’t sure which way to get off the stage.”

In an election night overstuffed with Portillo moments – Shapps! Coffey! Mordaunt! Rees-Mogg! – this one provided the final and most fitting sense of closure to some of the least distinguished years in British political history. I happened to be staying for the count in King’s Lynn at a once-grand hotel in which Robert Walpole, the first prime minister and the longest serving, celebrated many electoral triumphs. The tenure of his shortest-serving successor ended in contrastingly banal surroundings, a couple of miles up the road, on the badminton courts of the Lynnsport leisure centre, a venue that might have featured in one of Alan Partridge’s fever dreams.

After successfully locating the exit, Truss gave the BBC her airy take on why she thought the people of Downham Market and Thetford and Swaffham and Methwold had rejected her, ending 60 years of untroubled Conservative victories in the constituency. You might have imagined her argument would be at least prefaced by some reference to the fact her emergency budget had sent the pound crashing to its lowest-ever level and created a £30bn black hole in the economy overnight, casting her as the least popular prime minister in living memory. Instead, of course, she doubled down on the rhetoric that fuelled her risible “comeback” book, Ten Years to Save the West: “The issue we faced as Conservatives was we haven’t delivered sufficiently on the policies people want. That means keeping taxes low, but also … things like the Human Rights Act that made it very difficult for us to deport illegal immigrants.”

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/article/2024/jul/06/she-wasnt-sure-how-to-get-off-the-stage-liz-trusss-ungracious-count-retreat-caps-political-humiliation

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FeelingBlue

(758 posts)
2. It's been so noisy over here...
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 07:19 AM
Jul 2024

…in the US, that I failed to attend to conservative British leaders, their damaging policies and their very awkward moments. Yikes!

Thanks for sharing this interesting article, hatrack!!

llmart

(16,331 posts)
3. Love the Guardian.
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 08:19 AM
Jul 2024

Their writing is superb. In fact, I'd rather read them than most of our news sources these days. (I'm looking at you, Gray Lady.)

 

shrike3

(5,370 posts)
6. Don't like everything they do, but that's going to happen with any newspaper.
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 11:53 AM
Jul 2024

Overall, their content is good.

llmart

(16,331 posts)
7. I actually prefer watching the BBC for news also.
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 11:59 AM
Jul 2024

I've done that for years. Our news shows seem so superficial to me.

llmart

(16,331 posts)
9. Yep.
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 12:39 PM
Jul 2024

I've been a contributing member of PBS for years. I just finished watching their Capitol Fourth celebration. I looked at the crowd there and had two thoughts: one was of how the crowd was bigger than the one for the orange blob's inauguration and two, the diverse faces that were there to celebrate our country. It reminded me of how important it is to make sure we save America's ideals from those who want to destroy us.

paleotn

(19,181 posts)
4. Makes you wonder how the hell she ever got to where she is.
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 08:50 AM
Jul 2024

Truss isn't qualified to run a bake sale. Seems the UK has had the same political mass migration we've had. All the talentless hacks, thugs and morons shifted right and a party that once had vision and made some good points is now the party of stupid. The Tories of old are spinning in their graves.

Cheezoholic

(2,613 posts)
5. Velshi had a brit reporter on yesterday and asked a question, which as much as I like Velshi, I thought was shortsighted
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 09:41 AM
Jul 2024

With all of the attacks on the left globally how did the Brits manage to dodge a right wing bullet that seems to be the trend in the EU and US lately? The reporter gave some wishy washy reporter answer. Why Velshi, who is normally a lot sharper, would even ask that question out of the gate, it was like he's been hit with the blinders of the last week like everyone else over here.

The answer was obvious as John Oliver so "Oliveresquely" pointed out on his show the evening of the 4th of July, they didn't dodge the bullet. They finally got sick of being pissed on. They got taken over by the far right in 2010. They've had almost 15 years and 5 absolutely cruel RWNJ PM's and their own version of a "Project 2025" Parliament's worth of far right wing scorched earth policies that had led the UK deep into an economic and social darkness not seen in over 100 years.

Seriously, let us learn from what happened over there since 2010. It's truly devastating and those mechanism's are at work here as we speak.

hatrack

(60,920 posts)
10. Precisely - 14 straight years of lies and decay and poverty and collapsing public services . . .
Sat Jul 6, 2024, 01:06 PM
Jul 2024

Going on 45 years, if you hark back to Thatcher and her bullshit "philosophy" which underpinned the Big Blue Grift for all these years.

And people finally said "Fuck. This."

LeftishBrit

(41,303 posts)
11. Whereupon she went off to Milwaukee to attend the Republican convention
Tue Jul 30, 2024, 09:03 AM
Jul 2024

Her predecessor Boris Johnson and the truly dreadful 'Reform' (successor to UKIP) leader Nigel Farage also went, all competing with one another as to how tightly they could glue their lips to Donald Trump's royal rump. Though he seemed much less interested in these gatecrashers than they were in him.

I felt soooo ashamed just by being a compatriot of these three dreadful characters.

At least we have a saner-seeming government now.

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