Probity
Probity [mass noun] /ˈprəʊbɪti/ - Late Middle English from Latin probitas, from probus ‘good’: The quality of having strong moral principles; honesty and decency.
Not a quality much in evidence in Doris Pooh's chaotic playpen. I'd go so far that I'm minded of Al Capone when considering our PM's modus operandi. Although to give him some faint credit, the only defenestrations carried out thus far have been technical rather than physical. The whips were out in force after yesterday's PMQ's rather unedifying spectacle, and the media quickly briefed that all was now, if not well, at least less bad amongst the disaffected Tory ranks, and that open rebellion is on hold for now.
In typical Doris style, he's now banking on the feel-good factor of the English Covid lockdown restrictions being lifted, to smokescreen his way through to the other side of the publication of the Partygate report, if it ever gets aired at all; although I strongly suspect that the Cabal sorry, Cabinet will have already attempted to guide the investigation, judging by the knowing smirk on the Bear's face.
I understand the reticence about going for the confidence vote: the Idiot has enough support amongst the party lickspittles to defeat a vote of no confidence, which would give the bugger another clear twelve-month free rein to wreak more havoc on the country and its economy: not a place his many detractors want to be in. I hope I'm wrong about the independence, and yes, probity, of the inquiry into Partygate. A truly independent and dispassionate appraisal of what, after all is overwhelmingly damning prima facie evidence of wrong-doing, would be a welcome firebreak in the bushfire of mendacity currently burning through the corpus politicum of the UK.
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