Starmer seems to think he can do no wrong two weeks of Mandy-mania hearings point to the opposite conclusion | Marina Hyde
Briefly

Starmer seems to think he can do no wrong  two weeks of Mandy-mania hearings point to the opposite conclusion | Marina Hyde
"The UK would be a global economy unicorn by now if procedural rows were a path to growth. The displacement activists of the British political system mine further nitty-gritty on how a sex offender's best pal was accidentally-on-purpose appointed ambassador to the US."
"If we keep digging, we're totally going to strike gold and be able to pay for all the infrastructure upgrades and housing and incentives to capital investment that are the only way out of our decline spiral."
"If we stuck the prime minister on the psychoanalyst's couch, I think they'd find he subconsciously provokes these endlessly consuming process crises. It's certainly more his happy place than big ideas."
"Mad that Thornberry has spent the past week being glazed by people who honestly should know better. If Emily were an ice-cream she'd lick herself."
The UK political landscape is mired in procedural drama, overshadowing critical economic and defense issues. The prime minister faces scrutiny over appointments and committee hearings, which seem to consume more energy than generating substantial policy ideas. The focus on procedural conflicts detracts from addressing infrastructure upgrades and capital investment incentives necessary for economic growth. The ongoing committee investigations appear more likely to yield results than the current policies proposed by the opposition, highlighting a disconnect between political processes and real-world needs.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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