So the much trailed Government reshuffle didn’t happen – at least
not yet. This means that, in the absence of any real news, there has to be
speculation and punditry to fill the vacuum. For those of a right-leaning
persuasion, this means projecting their wish lists onto Young Dave, and when
they don’t get what they want, making sure they remind him whenever his actual
picks have a problem.
Iain Martin’s wish list includes
getting rid of Sayeeda Warsi from the Tory Party chair, not that he or
anyone else has anything against women, or, well, y’know, northern women who
are, sort of, er, Muslims. Thought
never entered their heads, guvnor. Who would he choose to replace her? Martin
would seriously consider Peepel like
Michael Howard. God help the Tory Party.
Binning Sayeeda Warsi would be a seriously bad move for the
Tories, but then, I’d rather they get shot out of office next time round, so no
problem guys – you get Dave to go ahead and sack her. Make policy at the whim
of Quentin Letts, Benedict Brogan, “Lunchtime”
O’Flynn, and of course the less than dynamic duo of the perpetually thirsty
Paul Staines and his odious tame gofer Henry Cole.
And if Iain Martin leads with an idea, the Telegraph’s political staff cannot be
far behind. “Deputy Political Editor”
James Kirkup tells of “Tory
MPs hoping for rise of the right”, and that the reshuffle could happen “as soon as tomorrow”, so managing not to
notice that the deed was supposed to have been done at the weekend. So who will
be getting the summons to step up?
For a paper like the Tel,
normally well-informed on Tory Party matters, Kirkup is hedging surprisingly
well: “a number of leading right-wing
conservatives are being tipped for promotion”. Like who? Well, possibly
Chris Grayling and Owen Paterson. But not definitely. Likewise, Michael Fallon
and Mark Francois “could be” promoted,
and Andrew Mitchell “may become”
chief whip.
But anyone can see it’s a right wing wish list because it
almost slavers at the prospect of getting rid of Ken Clarke. The reasons for
that action are, more or less, that Ken is insufficiently anti-EU, and that, at
the age of 72, he’s, well, dead old (although he still has four more years to
go before reaching the age at which Winshton returned to 10 Downing Street in
1951).
Strangely, one voice talking a modicum of sense on the
reshuffle business is (yes, it’s her
again) Nadine Dorries, who says the process “will
create more enemies for Cameron among the overlooked. It won’t achieve much
else”. This is dead right in the longer term, but then the fragrant
Nadine won’t be getting that call, and I do wonder who the “Michael” is that she mentions.
No, musical chairs will not save this Government. But it keeps the hacks busy.
1 comment:
Wouldn't it be funny if he did give Nad a job though? Schaps' one, for example? She could hardly be worse, and then Boris would have one less cheerleader.
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