Home Forums Chat Forum Boris Johnson!

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  • Boris Johnson!
  • andybrad
    Full Member

    I hope they send the barsteward down!

    willard
    Full Member

    Ohhhh, watching him talk makes me so angry. I should stop watching the feed.

    1
    fossy
    Full Member

    So what’s the outcome of this, it’s OK to not remember, it’s all guidance and he believes what he’s done, so it’s all OK. He’s very good at remembering bullshit !

    1
    tjagain
    Full Member

    I think they well censure him but short of the ten day suspension needed for a recall petition and probable bye election.  I think thats all they can do to keep the tories on the committee onside as they are loyal to the party if not him and don’t want a bye election

    dissonance
    Full Member

    They like a good piss up these Ministers don’t they.

    It explains quite a lot looking back.

    2
    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    When it comes down to it, he’s either lying his arse off, or he’s an absolute imbecile that couldn’t even interpret the guidance/ rules he was telling the nation, repeatedly.

    I hope that either/ both of these prospects make him unfit to be a PM again.

    1
    BillMC
    Full Member

    It’s just not cricket if they let him off to avoid a bye election .

    1
    kelvin
    Full Member

    “I can’t name any of the officials that gave me the advice, they went to another school.”

    PrinceJohn
    Full Member

    It’s fascinating how he’ll look to blame advisors for not advising him correctly.

    1
    spawnofyorkshire
    Full Member

    He’s got very few friends remaining in the current tory leadership and has called out Rishi on two different things today. They’ll throw him under the bus I reckon, ten day censure plus bye-election. He’s the dead cat to avoid anyone looking a bit more closely at Rishi (or his taxes)

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Oh, he’s changed his story… he didn’t receive advice that “all guidance was followed”… but it was his “lived experience” that they were, and he can’t remember anyone advising him otherwise. Can’t argue with that.

    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    “have to get a huge amount of business done”

    We all saw the business they were getting done. Siphoning off vast amounts of public cash to themselves and their mates, Matt Hancock was certainly up to a lot of business in his office, and Johnson seems to have been in the business of hosting numerous piss ups which I suppose does at least prove that Government can organise a piss up in an office, if not a brewery.

    3
    fatmountain
    Free Member

    What a total farce.

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    Purely coincidentally, Sunak has just released all the information on his tax affairs!

    Obviously nothing to do with any other things in the news today.😂

    1
    franksinatra
    Full Member

    It is amazing how sometimes his memory can recall exact decisions made within a 10min window over two years ago. And yet on other questions, he cannot recall anything useful.

    hightensionline
    Full Member

    He does love an interruption. The claims he had been “repeatedly assured” the rules were not broken on several occasions when he spoke in the Commons turn out to be vague, or just utter tosh. Unnamed advisors, wiffle-waffle. It’s going to give us PTSD listening to this.

    p.s. Sunak choosing to try and bury his tax returns today, whilst everyone is watching this unfold. Edit, as pointed out by @Poopscoop

    2
    frankconway
    Free Member

    It’s not going well for him.
    He’s getting agitated and Bernard Jenkin is on again.

    4
    fatmountain
    Free Member

    Uncomfortable viewing, but difficult to look away, isn’t? If anything, this is nothing but absurd and proves to my mind how we’ve arrived to a point in public and political discourse which is no longer based on reality, but on consensus-based lying: we know he’s lying, he knows he’s lying, the panel knows he’s lying — quite simply, there can be no doubt in any reasonable mind that he’s not lying. Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson has debased everything he’s touched, including this ridiculous farce of an inquiry.

    franksinatra
    Full Member

    He is getting rattled, you can see that he is genuinely confused as to why people would question him. He is far too used to getting his own way.

    2
    bigdawg
    Free Member

    Im no royalist but this is respect and dignity… and the day after one of their parties…

    https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/6B62/production/_122709472_bf1c42fa-3c01-4f64-9807-9b44295ff8ae.jpg.webp

    Really wish hed just go, he’s an absolutely vile person who’s pretty much ruined the country, created hate and division and is an embarrassment to the UK…

    what was that he was saying about not wearing masks indoors….

    crazy-legs
    Full Member

    It is amazing how sometimes his memory can recall exact decisions made within a 10min window over two years ago. And yet on other questions, he cannot recall anything useful.

    It’s either an astonishingly selective memory or, much more likely, he’s simply lying.

    frankconway
    Free Member

    ‘Respect for this committee and parliament’.
    Really??

    tjagain
    Full Member

    He is getting a bit of a kicking isn’t he?  Thats the impression I get from the text.  The contempt the committee have for him is clear

    mrsheen
    Free Member

    The faces of his smug legal team are starting to annoy me.

    2
    hightensionline
    Full Member

    So he won’t denounce anyone calling it a kangaroo court, because they’re obviously going to find him not guilty as the breaches are all nonsense. So if/when they find against him, do we end up in a Trump style scenario of insurrection towards due process?

    spawnofyorkshire
    Full Member

    The faces of his smug legal team are starting to annoy me.

    The faces of his tax-payer funded legal team?

    jimw
    Free Member

    He has not actually said he doesn’t think it’s a witch hunt or kangaroo court, apparently waiting to get the decision to make up his mind. Not likely to make the committee happy

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    He’s got very few friends remaining in the current tory leadership and has called out Rishi on two different things today. They’ll throw him under the bus I reckon, ten day censure plus bye-election.

    I said something similar yesterday, he’s only influential in a narrow and getting narrower part of the party who still think they can ride his coat tails to the trough. If they get rid of him then he loses all that. He’ll still bluster, and show up on GB News to tell them that the Tories aren’t nasty enough, but the people who listen to that aren’t going to vote for anyone else unless there’s a UKIP2.0.

    Even the after dinner speaking circuit might prove less lucrative than he thought, how many of us would sit through this crap?

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    When it comes down to it, he’s either lying his arse off, or he’s an absolute imbecile that couldn’t even interpret the guidance/ rules he was telling the nation, repeatedly.

    Though he’s also told the committee under oath that he fully understood the rules, making the only viable “I am an imbecile” defence “I am too stupid to even realise that I’m stupid”, he can’t plead known idiocy.

    And I think he’s just now confirmed another misleading of parliament? Pretty sure he told parliament that he had received guidance that all advice was followed, now he’s saying under oath that he didn’t.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    He’s claiming that he still believes that all guidance was followed… at events people were fined for attending. I’m surprised at that. But it’s hard to argue against what someone believes in the face of all evidence to the contrary. They can believe (or claim to believe) anything, no “evidence” can prove they don’t believe what they say, only that the claimed belief is nonsensical.

    EDIT: summing up… he just keeps saying “what I believe” or “what I believed” over and over again

    EDIT2: sorry, that wasn’t summing up… just a clipping from earlier

    1
    hightensionline
    Full Member

    Even the after dinner speaking circuit might prove less lucrative than he thought, how many of us would sit through this crap

    He’ll have to struggle by on the £115k we’ll pay him every year. Tough, I know.

    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    The faces of his smug legal team are starting to annoy me.

    Not a bad gig though.

    BJ: “So what’s your device?”

    Expensive team of lawyers: “Just lie or say you can’t remember.”

    BJ: “Great, will do!”

    3
    fatmountain
    Free Member

    Wow, that point!

    If the result exonerates me: not a kangaroo court.
    If the result implicates me: a kangaroo court.

    The guy behind him in the round glasses expression summed it up.

    2
    Rich_s
    Full Member

    Even the after dinner speaking circuit might prove less lucrative than he thought, how many of us would sit through this crap?

    If you’ve read Jeremy Vine’s version of events on the after dinner circuit, there are plenty of braying, pissed buffoons who would pay handsomely for the BJoris “experience”.

    2
    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    fatmountain
    Free Member
    Wow, that point!

    If the result exonerates me: not a kangaroo court.
    If the result implicates me: a kangaroo court.

    The guy behind him in the round glasses expression summed it up.

    Amazing eh? Right out of the Trump playbook too.

    mattyfez
    Full Member

    Questions have now concluded.

    Ms Harman now invites Mr Johnson to make “any final points” that he hasn’t already mentioned or have not come up in the committee’s question.

    “Thank you, I have very much enjoyed our discussion,” Mr Johnson said, to a brief outburst of laughter.

    “I genuinely think it has been a useful discussion and I hope it’s clear to the committee what was in my heart and in my mind.”

    Yes it’s pretty damn clear.
    What the ‘committee’ do about it remains to be seen.

    1
    DrJ
    Full Member

    Seems like “thanking and appreciating” colleagues is doing a lot of heavy lifting.

    jimw
    Free Member

    I think the really tricky part for him is that it seems the “assurances” he said he was given in HOC were given by political media advisor appointees without trying to find out from anyone with some Parliamentary legal expertise. I think that’s why Jenkin made the point so forcefully as by glibly saying this he could be “reckless”

    1
    Poopscoop
    Full Member

    Well, this shall from hence be known as the “I believe” defence.

    “Sorry officer, I believed that it was ok to shoot the neighbour over his diabolical parking habits as no-one had advised me otherwise.”

    And they say ignorance is no defence! Pfft!

    davros
    Full Member

    I like how drinking at work is a total non-issue because it wasn’t explicitly prohibited by the rules/guidance. Where as to most people in most workplaces, the presence of booze would mean a social event. So it just seems odd that booze isn’t the smoking gun it should be.

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