So Young Dave has completed most of his
reshuffle, and a sorry sight much of it is: Chris Grayling has actually
been promoted, and is now Justice Secretary. Jeremy Hunt has not only remained
in the cabinet but has been made Health Secretary. Grant Shapps, answering the
pleas of Coalition critics everywhere, has been made Tory Party chairman. And
Justine Greening has left Transport.
However, and with reshuffles there is inevitably a however,
Ms Greening, who has taken over as International Development Secretary, is
still a cabinet minister. Should that be significant? Well, if the subsequent
outburst by London’s occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is
anything to go by, it is most significant, and shows that Bozza still holds a
candle for his pet airport project.
“There can be only one
reason to move her - and that is to expand Heathrow Airport. It is simply mad
to build a new runway in the middle of west London. Nearly a third of the
victims of aircraft noise in the whole of Europe live in the vicinity of
Heathrow. Now it is clear that the government wants to ditch its promises and
send yet more planes over central London. The third runway would mean more
traffic, more noise, more pollution - and a serious reduction in the quality of
life for hundreds of thousands of people. We will fight this all the way”
said Bozza, in an interview with Sky News (“first
for breaking wind”).
Going once more into Jon Stewart mode, two things here. One,
Ms Greening effectively
threatened to leave the cabinet
if a Heathrow expansion went ahead. So moving her sideways does not remove that
threat.
And second, Heathrow is not, as anyone who looks in on Zelo
Street will know, the only alternative to Boris Island for airport
capacity in the south-east. There has been no word yet on the
future of nearby RAF Northolt, but the main event could hinge on
developments surrounding the story from last weekend.
This, as I posted
yesterday, first emerged in the Independent
On Sunday, and suggested that a consortium was looking at locations in
Oxfordshire and Berkshire – not Buckinghamshire, where the Roskill Commission
recommended a new airport over 40 years ago – for a new hub airport. As I
pointed out, this could easily mean that a former airbase site could be
involved.
Why so? Well, there aren’t any recently abandoned such sites
in Buckinghamshire, but there are in the other two counties. That development
would take all the aircraft noise away from west London, just as Bozza wants.
So what’s the problem? Simples. It
wouldn’t be Boris Island. And Bozza wants to have his airport, located where he
says it should be. Hence the mardy strop.
Thus the difference between the “man of the people” image and reality. Crikey!
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