What the Tory Press Says (Boris's latest U- Turn)

22 Dec 2020

After the Prime Minister announced the sudden cancellation of Christmas plans on Saturday. As you might expect criticism by Lib Dem leader Ed Davey, after all he heads an opposition party whose job it is to hold the government to account. In some ways his criticism was restrained when compared to the views expressed in the Tory supporting press

Here is a sample of what they've had to say about the decision

Daily Mail: 'Does the prime minister have any idea what he's doing?'

Mr Johnson's previous message, 'Have yourself a merry little Christmas', has morphed into another popular song with a very different tone - 'Lonely this Christmas'.

Carefully and lovingly laid plans for families to get together for the first time in months were dashed at a stroke. Overnight, the season of goodwill evaporated. And, after yet another screeching U-turn, the question on many lips is: does the prime minister have any idea what he's doing or where he's going? Is there a coherent Covid strategy?

Or is he all at sea - the captain of a rudderless ship being controlled by the currents rather than steering a steady course?

Instead of meekly buying into every scientific scare story, Mr Johnson must interrogate each one and come to measured conclusions based on a balance of risk. That is what political leadership is all about. Seize control of events or, sure as shooting, they will seize control of you.

The Sun: 'No doubt Boris Johnson has made a pig's ear of things recently …'

There's no doubt that Boris Johnson has made a pig's ear of things recently. Hard-up families waking up in tier 4 this morning will long remember the way in which their festive reunions were cancelled at the 11th hour - after the cash had been spent.

The Times: 'The mother of all U-turns …'

I worked with Johnson for years. I don't believe he sets out to be duplicitous or to mislead. He is just desperate to be liked, a trait which is desperately incompatible with leading a country through such a time.

Clare Foges, columnist

Daily Telegraph leader: 'This dismal pattern of promising one thing and delivering another …'

Tory MPs critical of the lockdown measures question whether this decision was deliberately delayed until the Commons rose for the recess on Friday, thereby avoiding a possible backbench revolt.

This is denied by ministers who say they were not fully alerted to the spread of the new variant of the virus until Friday night and action could no longer be put off. We concede that these are difficult times for the government but this dismal pattern of promising one thing and delivering another is hardly designed to reinforce public faith and trust in the way this crisis is being handled.

This website uses cookies

Like most websites, this site uses cookies. Some are required to make it work, while others are used for statistical or marketing purposes. If you choose not to allow cookies some features may not be available, such as content from other websites. Please read our Cookie Policy for more information.

Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the website to function properly.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us to understand how our visitors use our website.
Marketing cookies are used by third parties or publishers to display personalized advertisements. They do this by tracking visitors across websites.