As the MPs expenses affair wound down, and the dust settled
after the 2010 General Election, a 48 year old man fetched up at London’s
Victoria station one evening and made his way to the Gatwick Express platforms.
As an incoming train drew into Platform 13, he threw himself underneath it.
Only by sheer good fortune did he escape with nothing more serious than cuts
and bruises.
The man was Tory MP
David Ruffley, who has represented Bury St Edmunds since 1997. He suffered
from bouts of depression, and had clearly been in a very dark place for some
months, after being accused of abusing the expenses regime, along with the news
that he had been passed over for a ministerial post. He was worried that he
might face a serious challenge at the following election.
The incident at Victoria station did not go unnoticed: the
Mail ran an extensive story on
Ruffley, the Telegraph followed suit, as did
the Sun. Westminster watchers
chipped in: Iain
Dale posted on the affair, and Ruffley’s political adversary but fellow
depressive Alastair
Campbell sent his best wishes and hoped he would get the support he needed
in the coming months.
One might also think that, after going for the sympathy vote
in
his recent fawning Guardian profile
(telling that his wife had “some pretty
awful Mondays in the office” and on one occasion “she closed the door and cried” after unfavourable comment on his
activities), the perpetually thirsty Paul Staines and his rabble at the Guido
Fawkes blog would be equally mindful of others’ mental states.
But that thought would be misplaced, as the Fawkes blog
yesterday launched
a typically prurient assault on Ruffley, telling scare stories about his
supposed bad temper and encouraging his former research assistants to come
forward and dish the dirt on the MP. Sixteen of them are named – that any were
contacted before the naming is doubtful – and working for Ruffley called “Westminster’s toughest job”.
Ruffley is then castigated as “obnoxious” (this from a blog run by the same person who was caught
on camera aggressively
effing and blinding outside London Bridge station last year), and it is
alleged that “things have become so ‘shouty’
recently that Ruffley has been reported to party whips over his behaviour”.
That’s in addition to those things that “Guido
hears reports of ... apparently”.
It’s one thing to engage in banter and the odd verbal
exchange, but quite another to deliberately pick on someone with a worrying
record of severe depression, and for no other reason than for a group of
sneering boo-boys to get a cheap thrill out of the whole thing. Ruffley’s
recent history is well enough known, and the Fawkes rabble has no excuse for
such vicious and deliberate cruelty.
This is the behaviour of a bunch of utter shits. Another fine mess, once again.
The comments on that article are disgusting. I only looked at the first few and there was only one who pointed out his mental state ant that he once tried suicide and the rest of them wanted him to try again. What a bunch of ******* *******. I am now angry.
ReplyDeleteThat particular blog also tried to start a rumour that Gordon Brown was on some kind of anti-depressant or anti-psychotic - just for the purpose of making snide comments and unkind jokes about it. I don't know what medication Gordon Brown is on (or not), but I don't think it should be used as some kind of crappy insult.
ReplyDeleteI was one of the 16 named and no I was not contacted, BUT....pretty much everything Guido says about life in PCH469 is basically spot on. The only thing he is missing is that this behaviour may be the unfortunate result of the same mental issues that caused the more famous incident, and that the appropriate treatment may be, well, treatment, rather than ridicule.
ReplyDeleteBut he should not be allowed to work in Parliament and supervise staff until he is better. Potential future victims need to know the truth, so for that I don't find myself condemning our bonfire loving friend as strongly as the author of this article does.