The Independent

It’s always the little people that make sacrifices, isn’t it

- Nick Donnelly Dorset

I am grateful for Mr Johnson’s clear illustrati­on of the nature of the problems presented by global warming. Whilst leading a lavish lifestyle at other people’s expense, including flying from Cop26 in a private jet in order to have lunch with a crony and enjoying multiple foreign holidays, he still manages to see himself as a leader on climate change. His attitude seems to be public demagoguer­y and private selfish indulgence – in other words, it’s up to the little people to make the sacrifices… Again.

Keir Starmer’s Corbyn past

The shadow cabinet has urged Sir Keir Starmer to expel Jeremy Corbyn from the Labour Party. They are afraid that Sir Keir’s past support for Corbyn will damage Labour’s election prospects. It certainly is something of a mystery how Sir Keir’s attitude to Corbyn changed so radically after the 2019 election.

He had said Corbyn would make a great prime minister and also said at one point: “The attacks on Jeremy Corbyn were terrible, they vilified him, and they knew what they were doing and why they were doing it.” Whatever was going on in Sir Keir’s mind, it is inconceiva­ble that he believed that Corbyn was a racist antisemite, or enabler of antisemiti­sm when he spoke those words.

Brendan O’Brien London

Solar power, who?

British Gas says its profits will double. This is not surprising when those of us with solar panels receive peanuts for the power we give the grid, only to be sold back to consumers at inflated prices.

J. Longstaff Sussex

Don’t make us pay for Hancock’s ignominy

I hope all the MPs who have been voting for Matt Hancock to remain in the TV show I’m a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here have been doing so using their personal phone accounts and not their parliament­ary ones. Much as I would love to see as much humiliatio­n as possible heaped upon Hancock I would hate to think that the general public is picking up the tab for these premium-rate phone calls.

Viv Pert London

Autumn statement, here we come

I read John Rentoul’s column with interest that indeed Kwasi Kwarteng’s Budget was undertaken with arrogant breakneck speed (Voices, yesterday) and although he admits this was an error of judgement, he does not really admit fiscal culpabilit­y.

But really the blame for this Kamikaze budget lies at the feet of both Truss and Kwarteng, because to carry on without and not seek an Office for Budget Responsibi­lity economic forecast was pivotal to the crash in the market and the ensuing furore that followed.

So now the predicted fallout and remedial measures will soon be apparent in the forthcomin­g autumn statement – and we are all so looking forward to that!

Judith Daniels Norfolk

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