Without trust, societies are vulnerable to forces that will pull them apart just when they should be at their most united

Boris Johnson this week attempted to palm off responsibility for imposing unpopular lockdowns to curb the spread of Covid-19 on to northern English politicians, without adequate compensation. He was wrong to do so. The chaotic responses and blame games have, perhaps permanently, exacerbated divisions in society. The prime minister’s emollience before the cameras on Friday is therefore welcome. Controlling the pandemic needs the public to have faith in the authorities and each other.

Having won power as a populist, maybe Mr Johnson thinks there is political advantage in chaos. But the prime minister cannot afford to lose support in the former “red wall” of traditional Labour seats that voted Conservative in last year’s election. These seats are the key to Mr Johnson’s political survival and events this week risk branding the Tories as being indifferent to the plight of the country’s former industrial heartlands.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Don’t overdo alcohol – or arguments: nine ways to stay healthy and happy this Christmas

Between family feuds, open flames and warmed-up leftovers, the yuletide period can…

BBC accused of ‘hiding’ Oxbridge bias on University Challenge in deepening elitism row

Corporation rejects freedom of information request from campaigner who claims show is…

Gary Lineker may return to Match of the Day as talks with BBC progress – reports

Sources close to presenter said to be confident impartiality row will be…

Prince Andrew faces trial after judge refuses to dismiss Giuffre case

Legal experts say Duke of York has ‘no good options left’ given…