As I pointed
out yesterday, the two established channels for disgruntled Police sources
to get their views heard are the Sun
and the Daily Mail. When Andrew
Mitchell had his singularly unfortunate outburst at officers guarding the gates
at the end of Downing Street, the first port of call was the Super Soaraway
Currant Bun. The response of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre can only
be imagined.
Thus it was that the Mail
tapped their own contacts at the Met and brought forth a front page of
righteous anger this morning, as Mitchell now stands additionally accused of
telling a WPC “I’ll
Have Your Job For This”, which, it is later helpfully explained,
was spiced up with an expletive in the original. Mitchell’s position is looking
less certain by the day. And that’s before all the other revelations.
One of those revelations, about Mitchell’s behaviour towards
Lucy Kinder during a volunteers’ trip to Africa, was
published by the Telegraph, which
means he’s in trouble. It details his “incredibly
aggressive” behaviour, with Ms Kinder being subjected to threats of
physical violence by those around him. Mitchell has also succeeded in ticking
off the Metropolitan Police Federation.
And that means he’s annoyed so many officers that word has
got back to the body that is effectively the cops’ trade union, whose chairman John Tully
has accused Young Dave of “hollow
words” after Cameron went to Manchester to pay tribute to the two officers
who were shot dead earlier in the week. Tully’s attack was also fuelled by
anger in the ranks over Police pay and pensions.
I know, strange, isn’t it, after Margaret Thatcher went out
of her way to see them right and get them on side, that a Conservative Prime
Minister seems so hell-bent on ticking them off? But, as Clive James might have
said, I digress. Back to the unfortunate Andrew Mitchell, who has also been
made the subject of an
attack by appalling Glenda Amanda Platell, which might actually help his
cause.
What won’t help his cause is the pundits queuing up at the Telegraph to put the boot in, foremost
of which is Norman Tebbit, who knows a bit about that kind of thing. Norm says,
with a subtlety not always evident during his ministerial days, “Andrew
Mitchell seems to be under more pressure than he can handle”, which, in
case you didn’t get it, means he isn’t up to the job.
Worse comes from Thomas Pascoe, who reveals that at Lazards,
“Lord
Mandelson was a welcome hire in comparison” to Mitchell (ouch). Benedict
Brogan makes
the obvious point that the affair does the wider Tory Party no good at all.
And Bernard Hogan-Howe, head man at the Met, has
previously gone on record on the subject of “opportunities” to arrest those who swear at his officers.
Cameron should have sacked Mitchell yesterday. Now they’re both in the mire.
1 comment:
It does take a very special sort of political talent to piss off the police, the armed forces, the civil service and the public, all at the same time and within no more than two and a half years.
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