The perpetually thirsty Paul Staines and his rabble at the
Guido Fawkes blog have been getting in the Christmas spirit recently, which,
more or less, means that when visiting the Rub-A-Dub, they become even more
Elephant’s Trunk and Mozart than usual. Sadly for The Great Guido, this has not
had a beneficial effect on their ability to bring their unfortunate readers up-to-date
news.
Worst Father Ted tribute act ever
While Staines, his tame gofer, the odious flannelled fool
Henry Cole, newly anointed teaboy Alex “Billy
Liar” Wickham, and viciously anti-Semitic “sketch writer” Simon “Lurch”
Carr were working themselves into a state of alcoholic derangement yesterday
lunchtime, it seems that news broken two weeks ago at One Great George Street
had still not reached them.
And, given the news was about one of their favourite
targets, this was a double omission. Zelo
Street regulars will by now know what is being alluded to here; for
everyone else, a little background may be in order.
On Wednesday December 3, campaigning group Hacked Off
presented the second annual Leveson lecture, delivered by Labour MP Tom Watson.
During that lecture, he told, to sustained applause, that as part of the Shadow
Cabinet reshuffle caused after Emily Thornberry resigned her post, Chris Bryant
had been appointed Shadow minister for Culture, Media and Sport.
Zelo Street
waited for the press reaction, the premise being that most, if not all, papers
would deliberately ignore the appointment in order to make it go away. This
they did. This blog subsequently
posted on Bryant’s promotion on Sunday December 7, with some Tweeters
telling me later that this was wrong, and that Bryant had only been made Shadow
Arts Minister. But they were unaware that when Watson made his announcement,
Bryant was in the hall, and did not dissent from the news.
Just seen ... late again!
Well, guess what? Two whole weeks after Tom Watson gave out
the news, and ten days after Zelo Street, Master Cole has at last
heard about it. “Just seen that [Chris
Bryant MP] has been moved to shadow DCMS” he confirmed on Twitter earlier,
and his pal Wickham dutifully Retweeted it. The Great Guido and his rabble ought
to give up if they can’t do better than that.
Of course, had they been in the Westminster Arms – which,
after all, is one of their favoured watering holes – after the lecture, as many
of those who had been in the hall were, they would have found out. It’s a
strange omission for a crowd who made such an effort to gatecrash Steve Coogan’s
party last year (and yes, that
was another miserable failure on their part, too).
They failed to turn up to their own Westminster local, then
couldn’t bother catching up on the news for a fortnight. Another fine mess, once again.
1 comment:
Mozart? Brahms surely? Brahms and lizt!
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