It’s that time of the week again, and as Young Dave takes on
all comers across the Dispatch Box today, possible attack lines for Mil The
Younger include the thaw in relations with Iran – but that risks a snark on
Syria – along with inflation being down, but still higher than wage rises. There’s
also Ukraine, the NHS funding gap, and Jean-Claude Juncker. So eyes down, look
in.
Boring. Yes it was.
So boring that Penny Mordaunt was on Twitter before it was half-way through. It
was punctuated with boring things like University Technical Colleges,
especially in Watford.
At this point I was glad that the Virgin Trains services I
use to get to and from London bat through Watford without much more than
slowing a little for that curve overlooking the Tesco Extra.
But yes, there was something of note, and it was cross party
consensus – of the kind that pulls a Prime Minister out of the poo, into which
he very nearly got pitched by his own side. Miliband to the rescue? Was this
right?
It certainly was: before Ed could even make his pitch,
Father of the House Peter Tapsell thundered to some purpose about the Chilcot
Inquiry. Where was the report? And would the PM start the process of impeachment
against Tone, for allegedly doing whatever it was that the Tories supported in
2003?
Whoops! Dave bodyswerved the Blair reference. But he’d have
published it sooner. The other lot – yes, you, the one waiting to bowl your
six, you – voted to drag it out. It’s their fault! He wasn’t convincing.
But then Miliband was conciliatory. He wanted progress
reports on the situation in Iraq. Agreed on reopening the embassy in Tehran.
Wanted to share concerns over extremism. Cameron was mildly distracted. The
House was unusually quiet. He did not need to raise his voice.
Nor, thank goodness, did he need to deploy what were Tractor
Statistics when it was Pa Broon, but jolly good figures now he was on that side
of the chamber.
And then the Labour benches came to his rescue a second
time, as Ben Bradshaw asked how he was getting on with Jean-Claude Juncker.
Dave was now a much happier bunny. He could raise his voice.
He had a rotten foreign bogeyman to rail at. Gosh, these Labour types could be
jolly useful when they tried.
But it was still a bit boring. I know this as Penny Mordaunt didn’t look up from her Twitter
conversation.
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