After some of them were a little too keen yesterday to
ridicule shadow Chancellor “Auguste”
Balls for what they knew was his stammer, the pundits are today about-turning
and pretending that it was all Balls’ fault, that he is now casting around for
sympathy (he isn’t), and that it’s OK because the Labour front bench routinely
heckle those opposite (as if the Tories and Lib Dems don’t).
The idea that Balls was playing the victim – after he had said “Sometimes that stammer gets the
better of me in the first minute or two when I speak ... But frankly that is
who I am. I don't mind that” and therefore clearly not doing so – was trowelled on by the obedient followers of the
legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre at the Daily Mail, particularly Lobby chairman
Tim Shipman.
“It is bizarre that Ed
Balls ... expects any sympathy for his condition” frothed Shipman, showing
his indignation at an event that he knew full well had not happened, and
therefore demonstrating the kind of journalistic skills that will keep
endearing him to the Vagina Monologue. His colleague James Chapman also span
the whole affair expertly by suggesting everyone look over there.
“I thought [the] mockery of Balls was because he said
[the] precise opposite of what he meant”
explained Chapman. Both Shipman and Chapman needed the Indy’s John Rentoul to spell out exactly what had happened, which
was that the Rt Hon Gideon George Oliver Osborne, heir to the Seventeenth
Baronet, had pulled a fast one with his figures by including the 4G licences
but not mentioning the fact.
Tory MPs were also excusing the hooting ridicule of Osborne
and his pal Young Dave, typical being the attitude of Devizes’ Claire Perry,
who decided it was OK because Labour do the same. It would be interesting to
know when the opposition front bench last ridiculed someone on the Government
side who has to occasionally wrestle with a speech impediment.
Meanwhile, to no surprise at all, no such thought was
allowed to enter for the rabble at the Guido Fawkes blog, where new teaboy Alex
Wickham became distinctly tetchy when he was upbraided on his admission that he
was “taking the piss” out of people
with stammers. That he had the Zelo Street post quoted at him would
have gone down like a cup of cold sick.
And the odious flannelled fool Henry Cole pretended that BBC
Political Editor Nick Robinson had excused his yah-boo hectoring, by – just like
Shipman – asserting that Balls had made his stammer an excuse. If he spins much
more, Cole will only dig himself in deeper. This pantheon of dissembly, all
desperately trying to make out that what they’ve done is someone else’s fault,
is remarkable to behold.
But they all know they
were wrong, and simply haven’t got the spine to admit it.
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