The last Prime Minister’s Questions before the Summer recess
has brought a very full house to the Commons. So what is Mil The Younger going
to chuck in Young Dave’s general direction for his end of term treat? Inflation
getting away from wage rises could be one topic. The reshuffle could be yet
more fruitful, especially the dumping of Michael “Oiky” Gove as an electoral liability. So here we go.
He did it again: Cameron hesitated. Not that most of the
press will let you know that, but yes, he hesitated, and more than once. It
could have been the persistent heckling of “Auguste”
Balls, whom Dave was once again trying to paint as being the real Labour
leader, but time and again our Prime Minister almost tripped himself up.
Miliband, on the other hand, had his questions prepared and
soundbites – predictable as some of them were – sharpened. And he had
congratulations for Dave. Yes, really he did. Congratulations, that is, for
listening to people and binning “Oiky”
Gove [laughter]. So why did he demote him?
Dave had his tractor statistics at the ready: look at all
those Free Schools! We’re doing better than the other lot did [not sure about
that one]! Why don’t Labour want to talk about employment? [it’s Questions TO
the PM, Dave. Try and keep up]
Ed was not letting this one go. He was, for once, rather
enjoying himself. Why did he sack Gove? Here Cameron really took the biscuit:
George Young was retiring at the next election, and he wanted the very best
candidate to replace him. Yeah, right: replace Young with someone who goes
round picking scraps with colleagues and can’t control his SpAds. Dave could
have been arguing in his spare time.
Miliband switched to the plight of those in poverty. Dave
countered: there were record numbers in work! There were record numbers of
jobs! There were, not to drive this one round the houses too much, record
numbers of tractor statistics.
It wasn’t just the Labour leader mentioning the reshuffle,
which was not exactly done at a time favourable to Cameron’s next PMQs
appearance. Why, Jack Straw asked, had he binned the Attorney General? Where,
Fiona O’Donnell asked, was the publication of his tax return?
Dave deflected: look at what Harriet Harman said on the
radio! Ed’s job is going to be reshuffled by his colleagues! The other lot don’t
want to talk about what I want to talk about!
Cameron was almost relived to have Charles Kennedy giving
him the lifeline of an opportunity to kick the SNP. The noise accompanying his
standing up, the former Lib Dem leader noted, was just like the old days.
That summed it up: Cameron and the same record tractor
statistics. Not convincing.
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