It was inevitable that Mrs Badenoch (North-West Essex, Conservative) LoTO would concentrate on the Mandelson Affair at PMQs. She did not disappoint. What transpired, however, was an astonishing demonstration of how isolated from reality the Prime Minister seems to have become, “Sir Olly Robbins… puts to bed all the allegations levelled at me by those opposite…
Sir Ollie’s straightforward and clear evidence confirmed that he had personally and the FC&DO had institutionally followed the procedures set out for the appointment and clearance of Lord Mandelson. Sir Keir is either a bit thick or deceitful. Case closed. His evidence concretely reinforced the suggestion that he and the FC&DO had followed the procedure…
Prime Ministerial Statement: Security Vetting We conclude from the Prime Minister’s statement (and replies) in the Commons this afternoon that either Sir Keir really is not very clever, or that he over-rode the written advice of his Cabinet Secretary to undertake security vetting before announcing the appointment of Lord Mandelson because he took a political…
Many headlines this week were understandably diverted towards Donald Trump’s possible reincarnation as Jesus and troubling suggestions from the renowned Bible scholar Vice-President James “JD” Vance that “it’s very, very important for the Pope to be careful when he talks about matters of theology.” That exchange alone probably deserves its own encyclical. When not occupied…
Following Tuesday evening’s Edward Heath Lecture in Salisbury by very fed up Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, it was not astonishing that LoTO focused all six of her questions on Defence Spending. Mrs Badenoch rose at 12:03:05 and asked: Mr Speaker intervened in apparent embarrassment to cut off Sir Keir’s third avoidance of these successive…
It has been James Vance Week, or for fans of Édith Piaf, “Semaine Je Regrette Tout.” With Westminster largely silent while Parliament was in Easter recess, British politics spent the week reacting to events elsewhere. The most consequential development was the quiet collapse of the Chagos deal, but this seemed like small beer compared to…
Another week in which British politics found itself waiting on events elsewhere. Iran continued to set the strategic tempo, Washington oscillated between negotiation and escalation by the hour and Westminster responded largely by adjusting language rather than making decisions. Several domestic signals were worth noting: a stalled youth mobility reset with the EU, an unexpectedly…