The Daily Telegraph

Blood-letting at Serengeti waterhole as hyenas surround hoarse PM

- By Madeline Grant

‘In addition to my duties in this house, I shall have further such meetings later today” rasped the PM as he addressed the Commons yesterday. He’d lost his voice – and he couldn’t have picked a worse day for it.

One of the rowdiest PMQS in recent memory, followed by the semi-circular firing squad of the Liaison Committee, and perhaps most alarming of all, a rendezvous with his own backbenche­rs at the 1922 Committee.

It wasn’t just his own vocal chords that had given up on him. The Conservati­ve benches looked sparsely populated. Those who had shown up slouched feebly, while their Labour counterpar­ts crammed in excitedly like hyenas at a watering hole at feeding time on the Serengeti.

Even the Eeyore-ish Leader of the Opposition appeared animated. Keir Starmer began in a familiar guise – the Witchfinde­r-general, scouring recent parliament­ary controvers­ies to unearth wrongdoing.

“When I was director of public prosecutio­ns,” he whined, placing his hand on his chest, “I prosecuted MPS who broke the rules. He has been investigat­ed by every organisati­on he’s ever been elected to.” But the PM had a trump card which he deployed against all questions about standards or sleaze – Sir Keir Starmer’s ties to Mishcon de Reya, which he mentioned repeatedly, to the irritation of the Speaker.

“Mr Speaker, I refer to the right hon gentleman’s ‘Mish-conduct’,” rasped the Prime Minister. Reverting to his gag once again, it was nearly drowned out by jeers, but he croaked on, with the kamikaze energy of Borat singing his Kazakh national anthem to a furious crowd at the Virginia Rodeo.

Lindsay Hoyle fought a long and doomed battle to restore order. “Let’s show a little more decorum” he’d say to the Labour frontbench, in his affable headmaster style. But after a few failed attempts to move the PM off Mishcon de Reya, he snapped. “Prime Minister!

Sit down!!!” he cried, morphing from Mr Chips into Miss Trunchbull. “In this House, I’m in charge!”

The backlash came from within and without – from old foes and erstwhile allies. Ian Blackford could barely contain his glee. “My goodness, look at the gaps on the Tory benches”, he gloated, as though crunching on the bone marrow of a particular­ly toothsome antelope. “They’ve all got second jobs!” brayed a colleague.

The SNP’S Chris Law scanned the horizon for the fabled backbenche­rs.

Swooping on the decision to scale back the Northern Powerhouse rail line, an infuriated-looking Jake Berry demanded to know if “the North can take the PM at his word?”

Alone on the benches, Michael Fabricant sought a retraction. “The Leader of the Opposition called the Prime Minister a coward – surely that is in breach of Erskine May, and improper, and should be withdrawn?”

“I withdraw it, but he’s no leader”, conceded Starmer. But the PM wasn’t there to witness this most barbed of disclaimer­s. He’d already cantered away like a panicked wildebeest.

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