Hancock Quits; Sajid Javid to Replace Him As Health Secretary

Following Matt Hancock’s resignation, the Prime Minister has appointed former Chancellor Sajid Javid as the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. BBC News has the story.

In a letter to the Prime Minister, [Hancock] said the Government “owe it to people who have sacrificed so much in this pandemic to be honest when we have let them down”.

Boris Johnson said he was “sorry” to receive the resignation.

Former Chancellor Sajid Javid has been confirmed as the new Health Secretary, Downing Street said.

Mr Hancock had been under increasing pressure to quit, after the Sun published pictures of Mr Hancock and Gina Coladangelo, who are both married with three children, kissing. The newspaper said they had been taken inside the Department of Health on May 6th.

Fellow Tory MPs, as well as Labour and the Covid Bereaved Families for Justice group, had called for the Health Secretary to be sacked.

BBC Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg said Number 10 had stressed that it had been Mr Hancock’s decision to go and that he had not been pushed out by the Prime Minister.

She said Ms Coladangelo was also leaving her role as a Non-Executive Director of the Department of Health.

In a video posted on Twitter, Mr Hancock said: “I have been to see the Prime Minister to resign as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care.”

“I understand the enormous sacrifices that everybody in this country has made, that you have made, and those of us who make these rules have got to stick by them and that’s why I have got to resign.”

Hancock’s full letter of resignation to the PM can be read below:

The BBC News report is worth reading in full.

Stop Press: According to MailOnline it’s a love match between Matt and Gina and the ex-Health Secretary told his wife on Thursday evening that the marriage was over and he intended to leave her.

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Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago

So the big question is: will Javid kill children?
I’m sure Hancock would have done it.
Does Javid have a moral compass?

Winston Smith
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

“Does Javid have a moral compass?” He’s a politician, does the Pope shit in the woods?

Course he hasn’t!

Susan
4 years ago
Reply to  Winston Smith

Haha. Very good.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Javid voted for all the coronabollocks laws, IIRC never voted against anything coronamadness related. So no, no evidence of moral compass.

He will carry on the Big Lie.

The govt has been smart in getting rid of Hancock. It will strengthen their position.

Hester
Hester
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

yes that concerns me too

JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

One heavily influenced by the later payoff for himself.

WorriedCitizen
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

An equally big question is ‘why didn’t Boris sack him?’

Winston Smith
4 years ago
Reply to  WorriedCitizen

Is it even relevant?

Winston Smith
4 years ago
Reply to  Winston Smith

To the people who downvoted me, are you that thick?

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Winston Smith

I agree it’s not relevant. They decided he should go, which was the right decision from their POV as it allows them to move on and continue their madness.

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  WorriedCitizen

Lazy, cruel, mean-minded, greedy, selfish and totally amoral: Bozo recognises a kindred spirit.

Sceptical Steve
Sceptical Steve
4 years ago
Reply to  WorriedCitizen

Johnson may not have sacked him, but the predictable choreography, with Hancock and his tart being told to make their minds up on Thursday night whether they intended to stay together, is an established whips’ response to this sort of business. Sending him off to the back benches for a period, with the obvious hint of an eventual return to a lower profile ministerial office, along with a promise to support all future government business, is an obvious mechanism to ensure his loyalty.

enlighteneduk
4 years ago
Reply to  WorriedCitizen

Because he’s a serial adulterer hinself. Would have looked too hypocritical even for Boris!

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

I think we all know the answer to that. The children will be forced to have untested vaccines which are known to affect reproductive organs. Think of the implications of it.

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Javid had a long career at Deutsche Bank which Reiner Fuellmich describes as a toxic and criminal organisation. We can safely deduce he is nothing more than a fully vetted stooge. Highly likely to be a Freemason, here to create more havoc and misery, division and change which will benefit no-one except the scum he serves. God help us!

186NO
186NO
4 years ago

Another forensically in depth succinct appraisal; all the hallmarks of prejudice and social ineptitude

enlighteneduk
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

He’s a politician, so undoubtedly not.

WeAllFallDown
WeAllFallDown
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Shamima Begum’s dead baby says not.

JayBee
4 years ago

A banker/derivatives gambler in charge of healthcare.
Where could his real interests lie, what are his qualifications for that post and what could possibly go wrong?!
As I said before, they are now openly taking the p*ss out of us plebs, and that appointment is just further proof of this and solely meant as such.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Where could his real interests lie…

Javid knows that this is a second chance at a top ministerial position, and there’s not going to be a third unless he passes muster. He needs to succeed this time, and he wants his family to be proud of him, so he will be very compliant with implementing the plan.
As a bonus, he will be so much cheaper than Hancock in terms of stuffed envelopes for those upcoming nasty u16 vaxx deeds that Hancock clearly hadn’t got the stomach for, and didn’t want on his conscience (hence the neatly staged exit stage left).
Perfect fall guy and a good result for Big Pharma, but wtf did everyone expect?

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

those upcoming nasty u16 vaxx deeds

Could you explain a bit more about this? I must have missed it

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

Could you explain a bit more about this?

A jest, I hope?

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

I think he’s talking about vaccinating under-16s, which is on the cards. And yes, it would be truly evil.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

And yes, it would be truly evil.

Such a pity TY and his loyal acolytes didn’t cotton onto and oppose this impending government slaughter weeks ago when the MHRA and VAERS figures for these disgusting experimental vaxxes started to firm up and sound the death knell for younger people. Instead LDS sat on the fence claiming it was neither pro nor anti vaxx, as if that were possible!
Hancock, unlike Toby, obviously did the maths, and scarpered. Evil is a much overused word these days, even for the smallest of things, calculated state genocide would be closer.

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

He was reportedly on 3 million quid a year at Deutsche Bank and took a WHOPPING 98% pay cut to get into politics. Do the math

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

Still much cheaper than Hancock in the long run, and so much more politically expendable as holder of this particular deadly poison chalice. Javid might well be clever at setting up a spreadsheet, but he doesn’t seem to realise when he is the one being set up. Vaulting ambition? Sucker? Take your pick.

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

Hancock is a silver spoon drain on society’s soul who possessed the narcissistic characteristics looked for by the “recruiters” Yuri Bezmenov describes in his warning to the west. Wikipedia suggests that on paper, Javid is more capable than Hancock. Either way, they are both corporatised no soul scumfucks, doing the bidding for their Bankster scumfuck masters. Yuri Bezmenov – Ideological Subversion. KGB Defector https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEefbbApuaE HANCOCK Early career After university, Hancock briefly worked for his family’s computer software company[12] and for a backbench Conservative MP,[7] before moving to London to work as an economist at the Bank of England, specialising in the housing market. In 2005, he became an economic adviser to the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, later becoming Osborne’s chief of staff. JAVID Banking career Javid had an 18-year City career where he rose to become a Board member of Deutsche Bank International.[20] Javid joined Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City immediately after graduation, working mostly in South America. Aged 25,[a] he became a vice president.[21][24]A 2012 article says he was actually vice-chairman.[25] He returned to London in 1997, and later joined Deutsche Bank as a director in 2000. In 2004, he became a managing director… Read more »

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

You could do a wiki-scan on most politicians and come up with the same conclusion. Alas, it is far less a question of capability or experience in British politics, but of something far less immediately tangible. For example, Osborne had little or no economic training or experience, but the Chancellor job was immediately (and permanently) his under Cameron. It was thus about social and class networks, corporate connections, family power, wheels within wheels etc. Osborne was never expected to do the difficult sums, they were provided for him. A capable economist/banker is not needed in this government, the orders come from elsewhere. Certainly Javid, despite having all the relevant talents on paper, was (unlike the inept Osborne) immediately politically expendable as Chancellor. This tells its own story, and has been much the same narrative with every other ministerial position Javid has briefly held. Be in no doubt Hancock resigned for political reasons other than the staged groping panto, but cabinet secrecy over the government’s chaotic and deadly vaxx and lockdown policy meant he was bound to use such an event as the public reason for leaving. There’s a clue in his resignation letter, when taking a thinly veiled side-swipe at… Read more »

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

Interesting analysis. I think it’s mainly to do with how much they impress and show willing down at the Lodge and how they perform in the depraved initiation rituals in the various secret societies they are all members of more than anything else. They have to be of a certain standing, have a certain pedigree, but most important of all they have to be dependable amoral liars – void of any true connection to God. It’s VERY important that they are able to lie through their teeth while looking into the camera to deliver the news that they are going to rubber stamp some deranged new policy which is going to ruin peoples’ lives without showing a shred of emotion or humanity. Hancock was thoroughly enjoying his role doing this, he is obviously someone who views the general public with pure disgust (commoners as they say at public school – divide and rule conditioning), as meat to be exploited, branded and sold, but he became too toxic so he was shown the door. “Good innings old chap but we’ve got to move you on now, so you’ll have to take one for the team”. Then they play the public like… Read more »

ebygum
4 years ago

Nadia’s rant is fantastic. Let’s hope they keep it up as you are right they have huge ‘popular’ followings. Every little helps.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

If those Loose Women’s ranting theatrical “anger” can influence anyone then that person can be just as easily swayed back again. It’s all part of the boo-hiss Panto, the letting off of collective steam, each playing their role dutifully. Emoting to a disaffected middle class (largely Tory voting) audience, the vast majority of which will still vote for the totalitarian state in 2024, or before, even with the arch puppet Johnson at the helm. after all, it’s not BJ’s fault it’s Sue Michie’s and SAGE’s; must be, because Toby says so. Along the way these angry virtuous souls on camera fail to point out to their loyal viewers that they have been had, conned, tricked, sold a pup (etc) by the government, and that Hancock will be back with his wife before the year’s end and several million quid plus contacts better off to boot – the means of exit having been agreed by all in advance. The tide is turning. How can it be? Is the underlying socio-demographic structure that acts as a conveyor to the top for the public school chaps going to break down? I think not. Are the corporate brown envelopes that direct the actions of… Read more »

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

You seem averse to the fact that there is real evidence that finally the British people are waking up to what is going on. It’s the arrogance and double standards that is resonating – one rule for me another rule for thee. G7 opened a lot of eyes to this for example. Rules being relaxed for football officials would be another. Watching packed football stadiums abroad where no-one gives a fuck about distancing would be another. It’s becoming very obvious this whole shitshow is a total fraud based on lies, even to people who have played ball all along. Covid is a fraud, it’s just the masses have been tricked into thinking otherwise, but the truth is it’s a fraud and that is very powerful. It’s the realisation that having followed every instruction and order to the letter, they are being played because it’s totally obvious and they are having their noses rubbed in it. They’ve been vaxxd and double vaxxd, done everything that was asked in terms of distancing and mask wearing and subjecting themselves and their kids to literal torture for long periods of time etc etc – all on the promise that if they do as they’re… Read more »

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

If they start injecting the kids, it will be a bloodbath. I was one of the few on here for weeks and weeks pointing out the upcoming slaughter of schoolchildren – so you probably got this info from me in the first place! Once the MHRA figures became clearer from the end of April I extrapolated these to show the possible scale of deaths and life changing conditions if the vaxx were given to schoolchildren. These were included in several comments with references. I also criticised LDS sitting on the fence on these mounting deaths and adverse reactions, and failing to provide a vaxx counter narrative, a viewpoint that was opposed by many LDS commenters. Take this example from 6 weeks ago, there were many more.. and hopefully before Government, teachers. medics and parents set their imperfect sights on sacrificing 200 (and possibly up to 2000) schoolchildren (around 1 in 44,000 deaths multiplied by 9 million school kids multiplied by 90% Yellow Card under-reporting) to the great god Big Pharma before Xmas, with still more wholly unnecessary phase 3 experimental gene therapy. https://staging.dailysceptic.org/2021/05/11/ministers-havent-ruled-out-ending-mask-wearing-requirements-on-june-21st-says-matt-hancock/ Where were you? I don’t trust you. I’m heartbroken. a LOT OF EFFORT into defending your oppressors… Read more »

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  B.F.Finlayson

I don’t value celeb culture and I despise what the UK has become as a result of this kind of gutter level media (all deliberately engineered imo). I haven’t owned a TV for 20+ years but I have seen enough of the Loose Women (one of the most nauseating programmes imaginable) to know what it’s like and to have a vague idea of who they are. Watch some of it if you can bear it – it’s insightful to understand how mainstream culture in the UK has taken such a massive nosedive. But I was encouraged when I saw Gillian McKeith’s twitter page because while LW is certainly not my cup of tea, these people have great power over the public mind, what with Brits being so comsumed with celeb culture, so it is exactly these celebs, with millions of loyal fans and followers and viewers between them, who have the power to collectively turn this crap around. If only they could see the light, it would be a MASSIVE problem for the government. If a strong alliance of mainstream celebs came out swinging and started getting vocal about the reality of the jabs and how C19 is no more… Read more »

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago

This is interesting too – some of it is a bit far fetched, for sure, but the stuff about the virus being released and China is pretty chilling, considering what we are experiencing right now. Compelling viewing.

The Anglo Saxon Mission, explained by Bill Ryan : a Project Avalon video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ev7Kf4qPnnE&t=8s

I watched this today which I found on Right Said Fred’s twitter feed from a commenter. It’s a dire warning from Franciscan brother Br Bugnolo, talking about the incoming ADE and how to prepare for it. Not easy to listen to but I think we ignore this stuff at our peril.

Br. Bugnolo: When the Flu season comes, the Chaos will begin — Prepare yourselves NOW!
https://www.fromrome.info/2021/06/18/br-bugnolo-when-the-flu-season-comes-the-chaos-will-begin-prepare-yourselves-now/

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago

I guess most of us have wandered on and off the same online sheep tracks looking for relevant information, then learning best how to assess it, filter it and use it productively. My main beef has always been with controlled opposition, and sites like LDS that set out to regulate the opposition narrative until it becomes little more than a government friendly slap on the wrists. Doubtless TY will get his reward in due course. For example, I found it frustrating that LDS saw fit to lay down convoluted and counter-intuitive markers that openly advocate being anti-lockdown but not anti-experimental vaxx; whereas the two policies have openly been the primary enforcement prongs of totalitarian state policy from March 2020 (with face masks as the proud symbol of unquestioning compliance). Nevertheless get beyond ATL (and the sycophantic TY fan club) and some of the BTL comments and links provided (like your own) are often invaluable starting points for new explorations. As I have opined several times, just how much different might this site have been had we had a Corbyn government overseeing C19? We all know the gloves would have been off every day for a mere fraction of the damage… Read more »

paul smith
4 years ago

With Deutsche Bank since (at least) 2007, therefore had to know about the Danske Bank sleaze.
Grand.

chris c
chris c
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

No knowledge of or training in medicine, or science. Yes an ideal candidate.

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago

Sajid Javid is one my favourite politicians in the tory party .I loved him as home Secretary
I am happy with the appointment.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Javid voted for all the coronabollocks laws, IIRC never voted against anything coronamadness related.

How could a sceptic be happy about that?

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I am a very complex woman. In the beginning I was strong supporter of the first lockdown and all the restrictions because when I saw the media images of what was happening in Italy I was really scared the same would happen here in the UK. I supported the first lockdown because I was worried the NHS wouldn’t be able to cope with high rise in covid19 cases. The NHS even struggles to cope with winter flu. When I remembered all these things and I thought there was absolutely no way the NHS would cope with a tsunami of Covid19 cases. These events made a lockdown supporter. I also thought Chris Witty was nice man who wanted to protect public health after that is role as chief medical officer. I liked watching him on TV as well so I listened to everything he said. I didn’t question public health officials because I haven’t got scientific qualifications so it would be wrong for me to criticise the experts.  I began opposing lockdowns when I saw the damage it was doing and I realised it was for nothing because the period we were in lockdown the virus never went away. All lockdowns did was delay… Read more »

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Not bad, corporal. You’re not good enough though.

WeAllFallDown
WeAllFallDown
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

I think it’s satire..

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Well, Javid may be the least bad option that was plausible (i.e. outside of appointing an actual sceptic to the role). Let’s hope he at least makes some attempt at restoring sanity, though I am not optimistic. Certainly Hancock looked like he was drunk on power, but I probably they all are and some are better at hiding it than others.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

For real!?

JayBee
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Time to schedule an appointment yourself….

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

No

Jane G
Jane G
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

An appointment for what, exactly?
Why this pile-on from so many?

FGS!
Let’s not get as bad here as some of the other fora many of us have had to desert.

Would those of you downvoting Lady Grey have preferred Gove got the job?

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

God, why?

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

I really liked him as home secretary and I was disappointed when he resigned as Chancellor of the exchequer. I find him a pragmatic politician.

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Are you his Mistress and scared of getting caught on camera?

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

No I stay away from married men.

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Actually, just between me and you, does he wear grey Y Fronts like John Major?

Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

Big blue pants.

AN other lockdown sceptic
AN other lockdown sceptic
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Interesting ….

Lady Grey
Lady Grey
4 years ago

I don’t really like taking about my personal life but here it goes

Sajid Javid dad reminds me of my mum . His dad came to the UK from Pakistan and arrived at Heathrow Airport. My mum came to the UK in the 1980s and arrived at Heathrow Airport,. Javid dad worked as series of minimum wage jobs just like my mum did when she came here in to the UK.

Watching on the tv seeing someone of my background (child of immigrants) become a Home secretary and Chancellor is so inspiring. It’s is inspiring because in previous generations this would have never been allowed to happen. It shows how far Britain has come as nation.

When I was a teenager I was also drawn to Ruth Davidson because I found it really cool the Scottish tories had a female leader . I loved watch watching Ruth Davidson on TV . She really got interested in politics .

I really liked Javid as home secretary and I was upset when he resigned as Chancellor of the Exchequer. I feel like Javid has so much to offer in UK politics.

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

You try too hard corporal.

WeAllFallDown
WeAllFallDown
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

This is great!

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

Ah, I see, all is clear. You’re a proponent of ‘cult of personality’.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Lady Grey

He may have something to offer but at present the only honourable option as an MP is to actively campaign against coronamadness.

JamesM
JamesM
4 years ago

A quote from his resignation letter: “The NHS is the best gift a nation has ever given itself”. Well, there you go – a silly c**t right to the very end.

MadJock1
4 years ago
Reply to  JamesM

Couldn’t get a sick bag quickly enough when I read that line from Wankcock’s resignation letter.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  JamesM

From his perspective it’s the only true thing he’s ever said. The NHS has given them the flimsiest of pretexts to prioritise state over individual, and to strip the individual of his rights because the state will be overburdened.

Because of the NHS Wankcock has made out like a bandit

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  JamesM

Just called to mind that gift is the German for ‘poison’.

AllieT
AllieT
4 years ago

Yaaay! He resigned 😊😊😊😊😊😊

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  AllieT

In what way does that help the sceptic cause? He will be replaced by another person fully signed up to the folly and evil.

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I’m not sure, Javid will want revenge. Johnson should be worried.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

Well, I hope you are right, but I doubt it

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

Revenge – for what?

Sceptical Steve
Sceptical Steve
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

That’s how I’d read it. Johnson couldn’t afford the political tensions that would follow a wider resuffle, so appointing Javid was his path of least resistance. Nevertheless, Javid resigned as Chancellor because he would no allow Johnson’s team to play fast and loose with the nation’s finances, so he does seem to have a backbone.

X - In Search of Space
X - In Search of Space
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

But he had to go, and I am glad.

Noumenon
4 years ago

So Hancock couldn’t resist the old “build back better” in his video…

Adamb
4 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Nauseating, the whole thing. Sounded more like an Oscar award speech than a resignation in disgrace speech.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  Adamb

Nothing he says doesn’t sound like he’s trying too hard. Classic psychopath.

X - In Search of Space
X - In Search of Space
4 years ago
Reply to  Adamb

Yep, just unreal.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Wankcock wouldn’t be Wankcock if he didn’t constantly prostrate himself before his masters

X - In Search of Space
X - In Search of Space
4 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Yes, what an arse.

paul smith
4 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

It’s the equivalent of a Masonic Handshake in the Davos set.

NeilofWatford
4 years ago

Good riddance.
Johnson and Gove next.
Time for the great reset of the cabinet.

B.F.Finlayson
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

It’s not a reset, just a minor calibration due to Hancock getting the jitters about taking responsibility of the next stage of the killer vaxx program. Nothing has changed.

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

Lol yeah a cabinet reshuffle, that’ll show them.

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

A shiny distraction, nothing else. They’re all guilty, they’re all complicit in murder.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago

“Meet the new boss, same as the old boss”

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

“We won’t be fooled again” was always a foolish line.

TheFascistCoronaFraud
TheFascistCoronaFraud
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

President Bush — Fool me Once
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ux3DKxxFoM

mka1221
4 years ago

Didn’t Javid incur the displeasure of the Fat Pig by wanting to attend Davos?

He’s another WEF shill.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  mka1221

Of course. The British Government wouldn’t allow anyone other than a WEF crony to direct any part of their plandemic response

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago

Remember when this lying hypocritical bastard called for 10 year sentences when they break the rules? This Government is sick (I voted for Johnson) out of control and has to go.

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  Richard Austin

I too voted for the lying fat slimy criminal slug that became the dictator. I offer my deepest apologies.

Catee
4 years ago

“BBC Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg said Number 10 had stressed that it had been Mr Hancock’s decision to go and that he had not been pushed out by the Prime Minister”
Which is why Bojo the Clown must be next. If he cant even have the cajones to sack Wancock how can he possibly be allowed to carry on as primeminister?

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Catee

Why do we believe them?

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  Catee

Distraction. Do not let them distract us from their crimes.

Richard Austin
Richard Austin
4 years ago

All this means really is that we will have Sunak or Javid as next PM. Which one will the public take out first? Health or Money? My bet is they will realise just how much they supported theft from their wallets and purses.
Johnson won’t survive the fallout but the opposition is so poor the result is obvious. I predict an election in 2023.

Mike Durrans
Mike Durrans
4 years ago

Now we are totally governed by foreign trash

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Durrans

Foreign and native, whatever you mean by those terms, have been equally stupid in evil in this madness, here and everywhere else. The non-foreign population has been fooled, compliant and complicit.

Deborah T
Deborah T
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Durrans

Savid was born in this country, you silly man.

Cristi.Neagu
4 years ago

I don’t what to say… Sajid Javid did have some good ideas about certain things, but he didn’t end up doing much…

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

I don’t believe he ever voted against any of the corona laws. In fact I believe he voted for all of them. It’s possible he will personally be less fanatical than Hancock but he will follow the agenda.

Cristi.Neagu
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

The one thing I do like him for is that he pushed for the publication of the report on grooming gangs, but that was never publicized. So… he says a lot of things, but doesn’t do many. I do tend to agree that he will not be much of a change.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Cristi.Neagu

I agree about the grooming gangs. Rightly or wrongly I have more or less abandoned any interest in or thoughts about politics outside of covid, and freedom of speech. I suppose speaking out about grooming gangs displayed a certain amount of courage.

FrankiiB
4 years ago

This was a key appointment and a test of what Boris really wants to do. Did Boris want to build bridges with lockdown skeptics? No. Sajid Javid was one of the most pro-lockdown appointees possible. It shows the real Boris and the direction he wants to go in. I never bought the theory that Boris was really a skeptic.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  FrankiiB

That theory is really only promoted by Cummings and gullible tory sceptics who don’t want to believe that Boris really was the massive Trojan Horse he’s proven himself to be

Attaboy
Attaboy
4 years ago

Javid Javid he’s our man

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Attaboy

Speak for yourself.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

That was Aladin, wasn’t it? And Jaffa (and a Robin Williams voiced genie). I suspect that Sajid is about as likely to do it as Jaffa, sadly, though I would hope he’d be more economically literate.

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago

Oh sod it I will say it.
We have a half Turk as PM, and the majority of the important positions of State run by near descendents of the sub-continent.
Is this a representative government of the UK?

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

What does it matter where they come from? The whole of parliament, bar a few sceptics late to the party, has been complicit in this evil. People all over the world have. It’s got nothing to do with nationality or race. It’s to do with ideas and how people see life, and character. The British people have been as pathetic as every other nation.

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I think Brits have been a bit more pathetic. It’s the immigrant communities in this country which have the highest ratio of scepticism, in my experience… but then that is true of immigrants everywhere – the reason they emigrate is because they think and act for themselves – and continue to do so.

Julian
4 years ago

In my anecdotal experience I agree (I saw a big crowd of what looked like Peruvians today in the park, I think they are there every week, much more than 30 of them) but I think focusing on groups of any kind in this is counterproductive. There have been heroes and villains from every group/age range etc etc

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Agreed, and the cross-section of society represented by the sceptics is just as broad. Gender, creed, education, parents, net worth – it’s all irrelevant to how the ability and desire to think critically is distributed!

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Your comments are not relevant to mine.
This is not historically a representative government of the UK, i think that is clear. Whether that matters or not given the SARS2 situation is not relevant.
We have a man who has only allegencies to his own ego picking an inner cabal of people with at best limited historical lineage to the UK.
If that souns racist, it probably is, but not for bad reasons. It just poses questions about the ability of this group of people to really be able to represent their public.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

I agree with your assessment of our political class, but IMO it applies equally to homegrown politicians. It’s their thinking, not where they were born, that matters. My Mrs was born abroad but is fiercely proud of what she used to think were British values until March 2020 revealed how had things had got here, and lives them 100%, more so than Tony Blair, to pick one true Brit as an example.

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I agree that as far as the SARS2/covid situation is concerned it doesn’t matter at all. But even so, it is significant.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

I think what he’s trying to get at is these citizens of the world have no allegiance to Britain or her people and therefore not even the semblance of concern for her laws, her customs or her ideals.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

I think the same could be said for Blair and many other native born politicians and other figures. And their supporters. And our laws, customs and ideals have not done us much good.

I’m not super keen on mass immigration as we’ve had it, in fact I think it’s a bad thing, but honestly now I struggle to muster much enthusiasm to care about it one way or another.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

And our laws, customs and ideals have not done us much good.

Because they’re not being followed. They’re being subverted. The rule of law has been made a complete mockery of in this country, and not just in the past 18 months, either.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

Well there has been a drift in what I think is the wrong direction for a long time, here and elsewhere. I expect we probably agree on that. The British people have not done much to arrest it. I’m not some kind of dogmatic globalist or internationalist, in fact I think nation states with relatively stable traditions and populations are the least bad way of organising society, at present, but I am afraid we here are as much to blame as anyone. Things go in cycles, some things get better while others get worse.

Bella Donna
4 years ago

..

image_2021-06-26_212839.png
realarthurdent
4 years ago

Boris should have turned down his reignation, and then sacked him.

Not for his adultery but for being responsible for the deaths of thousands of people.

Winston Smith
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

“Boris should have turned down his reignation, and then sacked him” The Fat Cunt is complicit anyway.

Julian
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

The PM was also fully complicit in those deaths and in all the other evil. They all need to go down together, for their true crimes. It’s not time yet. The Big Lie must be discredited first.

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

All of the criminal, murderous junta should answer for their crimes.
Not just a little shit Wanksock that serves as a distraction.

Emmerich
4 years ago
Reply to  realarthurdent

What he should have done is pulled out a gun and shot him. Then turned the gun on himself

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Emmerich

But then we would be denied the pleasure of (hopefully) watching them squirm in court… is this a matter of when rather than if?

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago

I wish Matt all the best!

NOT!

Bella Donna
4 years ago

image_2021-06-26_214326.png
monica coyle
monica coyle
4 years ago
Reply to  Bella Donna

Of course he won’t be quarantining! He’s the PM for God’s sake, not a mere pleb hopefully to be eradicated before too long. One rule for us and one rule for them. Look at the G7 conference and those disgusting hypocrites cavorting about in plain sight, devoid of restrictions.

Steve-Devon
4 years ago

Trying to be a bit optimistic about this nonsense, I do get the feeling that the Powers that Be have been trying to find a way to back out of all this, they seem to have been embarrassed by the ever increasing dodgy ‘case’ numbers. It just maybe that a new face will be a cue for a revised approach to testing and a rolling back of this ridiculous distribution of DIY test kits to school children and young people.
We live in hope.

Marcus Aurelius knew
4 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

I have lost count of the times I have thought along similar lines over the last 16 months…

AN other lockdown sceptic
AN other lockdown sceptic
4 years ago

Yep, we’ve had a lot of false dawns. Sadly I think this will be another one.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  Steve-Devon

Don’t worry, Gates promised another.

Westminster68
Westminster68
4 years ago

So, one maniac nonentity gone. Another put in his place. The mystery is how and why we accept that such obvious self-regarding half-wits should ever be MPs in the first place. And then, dear God, made senior members of the government, allowed in their sneering, ignorant way to order us all about until! halleujah!, their vast feet of clay are made public. Not that it wasn’t obvious from the start that these were and are grotesque inadequates, patently incapable of understanding that their grasping for power is precisely why they should never be allowed anywhere near any sort of state office. I am not sure sure even Evelyn Waugh could have parodied so absolute an arse, smug and patently stupid, as Hancock. And then let us all consider the damage this preening parakeet has inflicted.

stewart
4 years ago

Deck chairs on the Titanic

baboon
4 years ago

I suspect that Hancock was already getting too toxic – he’s the one getting all the hate.

None of these policies are coming from the UK government anyway. I’m going to post a video link here tomorrow (I need to make the video first) showing some pretty disturbing proof of corruption and criminality by the police that is happening in both The Netherlands and the UK.

Ever heard of cops taking drugs while managing a protest? It’s a new one on me.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

You mean like the Nazis and amphetamines?

baboon
4 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

My thoughts exactly, yes.

baboon
4 years ago

I have to say, the video of Hancock and whats-her-face has been posted on Twitter all day and looks so odd I think it might be staged.

https://twitter.com/ladyhaja/status/1408523194596737026

There’s nothing natural about the way they move – it’s like watching really bad actors at a university drama.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

Hancock is a psychopath, he never stops acting because it’s his normal demeanour.

Noumenon
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

Although I still tend to agree the whole thing is fishy.

sophie123
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

I came on here to say exactly that. It’s like “right, let’s have a clinch and make it look like we are having an affair”
No lust, no passion. Very odd.

monica coyle
monica coyle
4 years ago
Reply to  sophie123

Yes, I agree. It looked set up. No passion whatsoever and so terribly lukewarm.
And not knowing about the hidden camera sounds a bit naff to me. And he didn’t look that upset giving his resignation speech either.

lockdownPaul
lockdownPaul
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

That embrase looks so awkward and that hand isn’t comfortable where it is. This was the first thing I saw when I saw it. And if you were after a cheeky snog you wouldn’t do it where there is CCTV. This is a setup for sure.

Old Maid
4 years ago
Reply to  lockdownPaul

Or maybe it’s just that he’s a poor lover? Don’t read on if you’ve just had your breakfast, but he looks to me as though he’s probably enthusiastic but lacks finesse. It’s that overgrown-schoolboy schtick.

Skeptical_Stu
Skeptical_Stu
4 years ago
Reply to  baboon

Exactly my thoughts. Wet fish Hancock is so passionless, an affair seems beyond him. His true desire lays in his lust for power. I have been so sick of him over the years, way before he was conveniently made health secretary before the scamdemic hit. He was the one, always coming out on the BBC, defending bad policy after bad policy. The epitome of the unprincipled brown-nosing suck up politician that infests our parliament.

This ‘affair’ has been staged for a reason that has yet to reveal itself. Whatever it is though, it won’t be a good one.

isobar
4 years ago

I understand and concur with the concerns about Javid but Gove would have been far worse. So my take is that regrettably it’s the lesser of two very evils

HeresJohnny
HeresJohnny
4 years ago

All a distraction I’m afraid. The big turds throwing a little shit under the bus to deflect the attention.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
4 years ago

Almost nobody could be worse than Hancock, even Gove. Hancock is what is sometimes referred to as a ‘gamma male’. You know the ones who are obsessed about prestige. I met him once ages ago in a private setting and though I didn’t speak to him it was well known in that circle that he ‘wanted to be a politician’. At the time I thought ‘another one, great’..little did I know. Javid…well realistically we weren’t going to get Steve Baker or Charles Walker. Best thing that can be said is that he isn’t a fanatic and shouldn’t personally feel attached to past policy.

DanClarke
DanClarke
4 years ago

Hancock made sure, even in his resignation speech, to get in the Build Back Better for the team.