Meet the new terrible boss same as the old terrible boss.

 

So, it’s time for Britons to allow themselves a brief moment of rejoicing. Keir Starmer has at last resigned. It’s time for us to laugh at Starmer’s deluded and some would say anti-British supporters online, mock Starmer’s resignation speech and mock his tears that many will say are performative and not real ones.

We should take the opportunity to publicly rage about Starmer’s decision to tar everyone who protested following the Southport Atrocity as ‘far right’, at the Chagos Affair, the Mandelson error and at the devastation to Britain’s economy that has occurred under the Starmer regime. We should rage about the two tier policing which although was not commanded by Starmer it is clear that Starmer let this terrible situation continue because he had no problem with the fact of the unequal policing that Britain suffers from. We should quite rightly show disrespect for a man who at every turn has disrespected us the British people. Starmer disrespected us in how he managed his government and when he censored us or harangued us and when the government told Britons in towns and cities up and down the land that they had to put up with imported savages the Government was dumping on them on pain of imprisonment if they voiced their objections to this.

Starmer had a tin ear to what the country needed and what the people wanted and it showed. If you wanted to fashion a man to be a Prime Minister in the image of the Establishment Blob a man divorced completely from the actual people of the nation then you’d create something akin to Starmer.

We should rejoice that Starmer has gone but the celebrations need to be brief because whoever replaces Starmer might be a whole lot worse. Whoever takes over from Starmer, most likely Andy Burnham is going to inherit the nation’s economic woes, partially made much worse by Starmer, a fractious society bordering on being a tinderbox, an NHS that can’t be trusted and public institutions for whom the word failure is far too mild a description. He’ll inherit the rape gangs that the Starmer Regime studiously did sod all about, two tier policing and a geopolitical situation that is so unstable that it sometimes makes me wish for the relative peace and stability of the Cold War.

Burnham will be able to do very little about Britain’s problems. Partially it’s because of Burnham’s own political views, he’s at heart a big state tax and spend socialist, but also because even if he did want to do that which is necessary for the nation to survive and thrive, he’s faced with quite a few problems. It’s not just that the potential Cabinet pool that has no deep end but he also has a Labour Parliamentary Party that will not countenance any restriction to state entitlements, the encroachment on the lives of Britons by the State or restrictions to migration.

He’s now going to be leading a country that might very soon run out of institutions that are willing to lend to Britain in order that the country can run day to day. Institutions will only lend to a nation if they believe that the particular nation is a good bet for a loan. There might come a time when lenders look at Britain and say ‘nah, I’m not lending to a country that isn’t growing economically and prioritises the warehousing of low IQ Somalis in London’s Zone Two’. Economically Burnham’s room to manoeuvre is very small indeed and it’s fair to say that not all the economic problems are the fault of Labour although they’ve not done much to try to sort these problems out. Taxes are already too high, the nations’ earnings are not as good as they could be, there are massive public sector and welfare burdens and the energy sector and those businesses that require energy have been shot to pieces by his own party and by the Conservatives when they were in government. We are still also being burdened by many of the unnecessary costs incurred by Covid including the massive amounts of fraud connected to things such as Covid bounce back loans.

I give it six to nine months before Burnham is floundering, or maybe less, because the problems Britain faces are so grave. I don’t think that Burnham’s honeymoon will last all that long to be honest. He’s going to find that having an ego and good communications abilities does not compensate for the skills and robustness necessary to repair the country. Remember, the new crap boss is likely to be the same or worse than the old crap boss.

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