Open Britain on the Continuing Fallout from D-Day for Sunak and His Failure to Be a Man of the People

I honestly don’t think you can argue with this summary of recent events. Sunak has never been remotely concerned about the effects of his policies on ordinary people. But then, neither have his party. As for apparently not caring if he goes, well, he had that green card lined up and ready for him going to America before he felt the call of party and nation. Or more probably, just the party. And I too was deprived of Sky TV as a child, ‘cos it hadn’t been invented then. As for Starmer lying about Corbyn- again-I am not remotely surprised. Corbyn’s now become the big boogie man of British politics, whose name is supposed to fill all right-thinking people with loathing and terror. Like Goldstein in 1984 and Trotsky in Stalin’s Russia. And Starmer can hardly open his trap without lying.

Update: 12/06/2024

22 days to go – Here’s what you need to know.

“It just ran over… apologies for keeping you.” – Sunak to ITV’s Paul Brand on leaving the D-Day Parade.

Just over three weeks out from the election, and Rishi Sunak continues to dig himself into a seemingly inescapable electoral hole. The great D-day departure scandal continues to haunt him. It seems that in leaving early, he traded a great PR moment with fellow world leaders for a crash-and-burn ITV interview that only made him look even more out of touch.

Sunak, asked to relate to British voters by talking about what he’s had to go without, talked about being deprived of “Sky tv” as a child. On top of all his other gaffes in attempt to relate to the public – and now a flatlining economy – the PM seems destined to lose this election. Oddly, he doesn’t seem to care.

As Sunak seeks out a lucrative private sector career in tech or finance and Britain moves forward after the election, perhaps there’s a lesson to be learned from our entitled prince of a PM. Maybe it’s a sign that our political system is excluding regular people, and increasingly being ruled by a minority clique that doesn’t care about – or even understand – ordinary people’s lives.

In other news…

  • Keir Starmer has called out Sunak’s manifesto as “Jeremy Corbyn-style” because it is “uncosted.” As journalist Robert Peston rightly pointed out, the 2019 Labour manifesto was fully costed, and Starmer himself endorsed the costings document for it. Is casual lying becoming endemic to British politics?
  • Lib Dems surged by four points yesterday following their manifesto announcement – commentators have associated it with their commitment to rejoining the EU single market.
  • The Green party will unveil its manifesto today, looking to capture progressive 18-34 year olds disillusioned with the Labour party. As former party leader Caroline Lucas put it: “[Labour] are being so cowardly right now”… “Greens in Parliament will push Keir Starmer to be a bit braver and a bit bolder.”
  • The Conservatives are reportedly receiving major donations from the same bankrollers behind the right-wing think tanks that  wrote Liz Truss’ calamitous mini-budget.

Thanks for reading.

All the very best,

The Open Britain Team

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