No place for Boris Johnson’s second-rate buffoonery at PMQs – Yorkshire Post Letters

From: Ian Richardson, Railway Street, Beverley.
Boris Johnson at Prime Minister's Questions.Boris Johnson at Prime Minister's Questions.
Boris Johnson at Prime Minister's Questions.

PRIME Minister’s Questions has become compulsive viewing for me each Wednesday lunchtime, certainly since Sir Keir Starmer became Leader of the Opposition (The Yorkshire Post, July 16).

Last week, in the unrehearsed manner of a really intelligent politician, he destroyed the Prime Minister’s almost every utterance with “this is just such rhetorical nonsense”.

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We are facing two deep crises – the existential damage being done by the pandemic, interwoven with the self-inflicted chaos likely to result from Brexit.

Boris Johnson has been criticsed for his recent performances at Prime Minister's Questions.Boris Johnson has been criticsed for his recent performances at Prime Minister's Questions.
Boris Johnson has been criticsed for his recent performances at Prime Minister's Questions.

When we need a statesman to lead and unite we get a clown, seeking to play to the gallery with mechanical, over-rehearsed responses that at best deceive and divide or poor gags such as Starmer having “more briefs than Calvin Klein”.

Of course, neither the virus nor the huge consequences of a no-deal Brexit will respond to such cheap, meaningless, second-rate buffoonery, more befitting a student common room than the House of Commons.

I have to accept that the Conservatives have a clear democratic right to govern, yet each week PMQs is brutally exposing the painful truth that Boris Johnson is not the answer for these troubled times.

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From: John Van der Gucht, Clayton Hall Road, Cross Hills, Bradford.

AT last Wednesday’s PMQs the PM again provided more proof, if any more was needed, of his unfitness for his high office, joking about briefs – underpants – in relation to the Covid-19 pandemic in response to Sir Keir Starmer.

Then joking about Starmer’s legal background with further mention of briefs.

Gosh! His back-up team must have chortled when they thought those up!

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Of course, Boris Johnson was never a lawyer, let alone a barrister.

He would have been quickly given the shove due to his unfamiliarity with the truth and his inability to command his brief, let alone his “briefs”!

From: Paul Rouse, Main Street, Sutton upon Derwent.

IT was a misguided political decision to entrust major elements of our communications infrastructure to a Chinese company, namely Huawei.

Having said that, I believe it would also be wrong to allow
any American-owned organisation to become too deeply enmeshed in any of our sensitive systems.

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We all know how companies like Apple and Microsoft can be with users and customers.

Once someone is hooked on to their product, usually by buying it, they are constantly bullied into accepting “updates” and software reorganisations designed to give a little in exchange for a lot more personal data.

Most young people accept that as the way of the world, as they happily expose their lives on social media.

I wonder how many people, young and old, realise that there is now a file on everyone.

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So, who can we trust to provide our essential infrastructure?

The answer seems to be no one but ourselves. So between now and 2027, we had better develop the capability to do it.

Editor’s note: first and foremost - and rarely have I written down these words with more sincerity - I hope this finds you well.

Almost certainly you are here because you value the quality and the integrity of the journalism produced by The Yorkshire Post’s journalists - almost all of which live alongside you in Yorkshire, spending the wages they earn with Yorkshire businesses - who last year took this title to the industry watchdog’s Most Trusted Newspaper in Britain accolade.

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And that is why I must make an urgent request of you: as advertising revenue declines, your support becomes evermore crucial to the maintenance of the journalistic standards expected of The Yorkshire Post. If you can, safely, please buy a paper or take up a subscription. We want to continue to make you proud of Yorkshire’s National Newspaper but we are going to need your help.

Postal subscription copies can be ordered by calling 0330 4030066 or by emailing [email protected]. Vouchers, to be exchanged at retail sales outlets - our newsagents need you, too - can be subscribed to by contacting subscriptions on 0330 1235950 or by visiting www.localsubsplus.co.uk where you should select The Yorkshire Post from the list of titles available.

If you want to help right now, download our tablet app from the App / Play Stores. Every contribution you make helps to provide this county with the best regional journalism in the country.

Sincerely. Thank you.

James Mitchinson

Editor

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