The Daily Telegraph

Tories spared blue-on-blue bloodletti­ng by the skittish nuns opposite

- By Tim Stanley

Yesterday, head boy Sajid Javid gave a statement about the new Covid restrictio­ns to the Commons. He said, in essence: “I don’t like ’em, but we’ve got no choice.”

Shadow minister Dr Rosena Allin-khan said the Government wasn’t going far enough – but then Labour’s strategy is always to outbid the Tories, so if Saj said kids must wear masks in class, Labour would insist they also be hosed down with Dettol. The party is feeling especially neurotic because it is going through a reshuffle, something deputy leader Angela Rayner only found out after she had denied it was happening.

Angry Ange was in the Commons, too. No doubt she was muttering blue murder behind her mask.

Sometimes the parties accidental­ly help each other out. Labour MPS hate Labour MPS, but they hate the Tories even more, and nothing unifies them like that gang of noisy Tories who refuse to wear masks in the Commons.

Des, Bridgers and Marky-mark Harper, the bad boys of Covid who usually sit at the back of the class, sneering at the goody-two-shoes kids who brought teacher an apple. Keeping the mask mandate would’ve been Labour’s Plan A, said Dr Allinkhan, triggering roars of laughter. They’ve been wearing them in Wales since the summer, noted Conservati­ve Alun Cairns, and infection rates are higher. “It’s mumbo jumbo,” added Sir Desmond Swayne in a considered interventi­on. I pity the fool that ever tries to muzzle that man.

Attention returned to Sajid. Richard Drax asked: Will the Health Secretary rule out a national lockdown? Saj couldn’t say.

Thank you for agreeing to hold a vote on the new measures, said Sir Graham Brady, but wouldn’t it have made more sense to do it today – before they came into effect? Saj side-stepped that one, too. And if the restrictio­ns are due to be reviewed in three weeks, said Andrew Bridgen, Saj surely knows the Commons will be in recess then – so will this be “government by diktat”?

See, there would be plenty of opportunit­y for blue-on-blue bloodletti­ng, were it not for Labour’s counter plan to mandate the wearing of 12 sheets of bubble-wrap. The Government’s measures might be untory, invasive and contradict­ory (masks in Waitrose but not in the cinema? I’ll be doing all my shopping in the local Odeon from now on), but Saj’s insistence that they are “temporary” and “precaution­ary” sounds more plausible when contrasted with a party opposite that responds to any disagreeme­nt with the consensus like a coachload of skittish nuns. It came to Saj to point out that even if we’d been wearing masks back in July, as Labour believes we ought, it wouldn’t have stopped the variant.

Tories, in their bones, generally think the sun will come out tomorrow. The Left is petrified that the world is about to end – ironic because Cop26, the summit the Left said was necessary to save us from certain death, might have been a super-spreader event.

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