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Boris Johnson wanted to let Covid kill the elderly – ex-aide

The prime minister didn’t have the right skill set to handle the pandemic; an independent hearing has been told.  Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson was fixated throughout the Covid-19 crisis on elderly people accepting their fate and saw the virus as ‘nature’s way of dealing with old people,’ an inquiry into Downing Street’s handling of the pandemic has heard.

At a Tuesday hearing as part of the government’s inquest into Covid-19, notes from Johnson’s top science adviser, Patrick Vallance, were shared, which detailed what the aide viewed as Johnson’s obsession with older people accepting risks as they related to the potentially fatal virus.

The notes, dated from August 2020, detailed Vallance’s opinion that Johnson was keen to let the young get on with life and keep the economy going – which Vallance described at the time as a quite bonkers set of exchanges.

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Vallance added in the notes: ‘[Johnson] says his party ‘thinks the whole thing is pathetic and Covid is just nature’s way of dealing with old people, and I am not entirely sure I disagree with them. A lot of moderate people think it is a bit too much.’ [He] wants to rely on polling.’

The notes were shared during evidence given to the UK Covid-19 inquiry by Johnson’s former director of communications, Lee Cain, as part of the independent investigation into London’s response to the pandemic.

Cain told the hearing that Johnson was reluctant to impose a so-called circuit-breaker lockdown to inhibit the spread of the virus in September 2020, as this was very much against what’s in his political DNA. However, Cain added that his own research had indicated that the UK public’s overall desire was for a more cautious approach.

Cain added that Johnson would frequently oscillate between different Covid policy decisions, delaying the government’s ability to effectively respond to the pandemic, which he said he found ’rather exhausting from time to time.’

‘What would probably be clear in Covid,’ Cain said when asked at the hearing if Johnson was the right person to lead the UK through the pandemic, ‘It was wrong for this prime minister’s skill set.’

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Johnson’s apparent indecisiveness, as revealed in Vallance’s notes, felt like being punched in the stomach, said Brenda Doherty, spokesperson for Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK, according to the BBC on Tuesday.

‘During the first and second waves of the pandemic the UK had one of the highest death tolls per person in the world from Covid-19 and it’s clear just how personally responsible for that he was,’ Doherty said.

Johnson, who announced the inquiry during his prime ministership in May 2021, has not commented publicly on the evidence detailed at the hearings this week, but a spokesperson said the former PM is cooperating fully with the inquiry. Johnson, as well as current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, are expected to give evidence later this year. You can share this story on social media: THOSE WHO CARE SHARE

4 replies »

    • BJ ‘s better role would have been the town jester , an absolute fool .Why he was ever put in the position of Prime Minister is beyond reason .Not that we ,in Canada , have a better product of what is called Prime Minister , but it is our lot presently, and we are working on it.

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      • As a Canadian, I think I’d rather have BOJO as our PM than the whiny, narcissistic little shit we have now. At least with BOJO, we can laugh at his attempts to keep his frat-boy looks and clownish acting out and his muddling attempts to say something coherent. Listening to Trudeau is akin to listening to fingernails on a chalkboard while he stutters and stammers breathlessly a string of gibberish about drowning Polar Bears, and Cow Farts that are supposedly destroying our planet.

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