Party conference season is upon us once more, with the Lib
Dems kicking off the big three gatherings with a visit to Glasgow. And, speaking
up for all those Tories who hate being part of a coalition, London’s occasional
Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson has turned his bluster (surely “fire”? – Ed) on Corporal Clegg and his
motley platoon in his “chicken feed”
generating column today.
“Condescending
Lord Clegg, the invincible loser of British politics” scoffs Bozza,
explaining by way of sub-heading that “Luckily,
there’s every chance the Lib Dems will be out of office after the next election”.
Yes, and so will Young Dave and his jolly good chaps, if recent polls are anything
to go by. So what has Bozza to tell us about this, other than revealing he’s
been watching lots of 70s Pink Panther films?
He has? Ho yus: “Our
little yellow friends”, he begins his address, which brings back memories
of the kind of dialogue which Peter Sellers might have got away with 35 years
ago, but would not do today. He wants to talk about Clegg’s talk yesterday that
“there are some causes that his troops
regard as sacred – some policies for which they are prepared to ‘die in the
trenches’”.
Bozza does love his war metaphors, as do so many politicians
who have never had to go near one. And he knows all the Great War locations, as
he demonstrates when talking of “an idea
for which they are going to take their stand on the Marne and fight to the last
drop of Lib Dem blood”. Yes, as opposed to all the stands Bozza took before
getting re-elected, only to drop them afterwards.
There weren’t going to be all those fare rises (wrong), he
was opposed to hospital cutbacks (or, more recently, not), Tramlink was going
to be extended to Crystal Palace (no it wasn’t), there weren’t going to be fire
service cuts (oh yes there were), and talk of Police cutbacks was just rotten
leftie scaremongering (no it wasn’t). So Bozza has no room to call out the Lib
Dems for being policy lite.
Anyhow, what’s his beef with Clegg and Co? Oh, it’s the
Mansion Tax, or as Bozza calls it, “a new
and draconian tax on housing”. That bad? “Many elderly pensioners would face a colossal annual fine of tens of
thousands of pounds – in other words, ruin ... He has failed to take account of
the way any such tax would bite disproportionately on London”. But it’s
only on homes worth over £2 million.
And, lest one forget, where is it that Bozza lives? Well, he
lives in North London, in an area where the average house price is around
£600,000. So average folks are not likely to be affected. But the Bozza
residence cost
its current occupants a cool £2.3 million, and is now worth over £2.6 million.
So he’s pleading on behalf of pensioners, while in reality pitching for Himself
Personally Now.
After all, that’s the only person who really matters to
Bozza. No change there, then.
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