As the row between the camps of the Rt Hon Gideon George
Oliver Osborne, heir to the Seventeenth Baronet, and his Labour shadow “Auguste” Balls rumbles
on, one typically unapologetic spinner still cannot bring himself to admit
he called the whole affair totally wrong: step forward the perpetually thirsty
Paul Staines, who styles himself Guido Fawkes.
Start with a little speculation ...
At the outset, Staines, in concert with his tame gofer, the
flannelled fool Henry Cole, called the controversy over the London Inter Bank
Offered Rate (LIBOR) in his usual tribal manner, and this, together with his
rabid hatred of Pa Broon and anyone associated with him, meant he immediately
declared that the then Labour Government Was The One Wot Done It.
... add a smear ...
And, not that there is any prejudice at the Fawkes blog
against Asian women, he also homed in on Brown’s former advisor Shriti Vadera,
and with an equal zeal to that with which he and Cole have been going after
Sayeeda Warsi. Readers were assured that Vadera would be revealed to be the
principal culprit. Moreover, this was underscored by Staines’ appeal to
authority in the matter.
... throw in a false assumption ...
The Great Guido formerly worked as a trader, but to pretend
that he is the bringer of superior insights in related matters also invites
inspection of his fall from grace and descent into bankruptcy following a
welter of lawsuits which left the distinct impression that Staines was a less
than totally honest being (which his actions of late have merely underscored).
... make that two false assumptions ...
So the reproduction of a LIBOR rate chart by the Fawkes blog
needs to be taken with a very large pinch of salt, together with the thought
that the rate dropped not because someone fiddled it, but because the financial
crisis that had previously driven it up had subsided, albeit temporarily. Nor
should anyone take seriously his attempt to suggest that Balls was trying to
drop Vadera in the mire.
... stir over-optimistically ...
This, though, was not the end of the spinning: as Osborne
mistakenly tried to smear Brown and Balls, Staines was there to eagerly report
the fateful Spectator article as if
it were fact, rather than the speculation that we now know it to have been. And
as late as yesterday afternoon, he was desperately suggesting that Bank of
England man Paul Tucker’s talk with the Cabinet Secretary proved him right.
... season with a little guilt by association ...
Sadly, it did not, and now even Tory MPs are telling Osborne
that he must apologise to Balls. It is becoming harder by the hour to see how
he can do otherwise. But Staines, not being in a position of power despite the
immodesty and braggadocio, will not be saying sorry any time soon. That is not
the way of The Great Guido. But some in the Westminster Village will be wary of
taking him on trust again.
... yet still end up staring Healey's Dictum in the face
That’s because he just keeps on calling it wrong. Another fine mess, once again.
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