The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pathetic sight as PM clings on to power

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Only Boris Johnson could try to spin a document as damning as the Sue Gray report as some ludicrous form of vindicatio­n. But the prime minister’s brass neck is by now so polished that even the stickiest of partygate mud simply slides off.

To any other resident of 10 Downing Street in this country’s history, Sue Gray’s report would be a resignatio­n matter.

On page after excruciati­ng page, the report paints a picture of an administra­tion not just out of step with the public, but one that was out of control.

“They partied, they sang, they drank, they vomited

When thousands were dying from Covid and others becoming gravely ill, when people were living in fear and were unable to welcome their nearest and dearest into their homes, Downing Street officials – elected and otherwise – carried on as they pleased.

They partied, they sang, they drank, they vomited.

And in doing so they brought shame on themselves and, in one fell swoop, underlined what many already thought – that we were not all in Covid together.

What the Gray report demonstrat­es is there were those to whom the rules – the laws of the land – applied, and those to whom they did not.

When that is the reality of government during a national crisis, the question should not be who should go. The question should be who should stay?

This national disgrace not only happened on Boris Johnson’s watch, he actively participat­ed in the Bacchanali­an feast around him.

He should have been first out of the door, followed by the many other rotten apples around him.

Yet Johnson clings to power like a limpet in a storm. It is a pathetic sight.

And one that perfectly sums up the abject state of a government that has set truth, integrity and honesty aside for political power and personal gain.

This country deserves

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