To call Sunak spineless would be a bold affront to invertebrates the world over. He is the archetype of the modern politician, who believes in precisely nothing. Having wrestled power from Truss, who fell afoul of the Uniparty, Sunak has done zero, zilch, nada with his time in office. Perhaps he has rearranged the stationery on his desk, but surely little more. He is the quintessential post-1997 politician: a hollow suit who enjoys summits and conferences, but who has no political convictions whatsoever. Politics, to such types, is merely the continuation of the school debating society, having little-to-no relation to reality.
The recent fracturing of the British social fabric – a long time coming but hastened by events in Israel and Palestine – demonstrates in front of our very eyes the gargantuan scale of the folly of recent years. The sturdy pillars which held up British society have been chipped away at relentlessly by successive governments in thrall to the globalist ideology. If there was a time for conservatism, it is now.
Instead of scoring this open goal, with Suella Braverman saying what everyone already knew, namely that the coppers are frightened of leftist mobs but are more than happy to stick the boot into those protesting other issues, Sunak has played another amazingly dreadful hand in her sacking. With the streets echoing calls for jihad and intifada, he has removed one of the few voices in government pointing out the astounding inequality in modern-day British policing.
To be fair, this is just another of his egregious misjudgements. While winning plaudits at the time for his constant splurging of cash during the Covid crisis, history will regard Sunak’s tenure in No. 11 as one which facilitated one of the most shocking policy decisions of post-War British history.
Yet Sunak’s failings are only outdone by those of his predecessors, although surely this is only due to their longer stints in office. As such, the reappearance of David Cameron in the Cabinet is a depressingly absurd development.
His return has the most flaccid of conservatives terribly excited. Another ‘return of the grown-ups’, after all. Those with strong memories will recall similar words used when Biden became President, an ascendancy which was soon followed by a series of potentially world war-starting proxy wars, so don’t get too excited by the prospect of another ‘adult’ round the table.
Of course, this phrase is just Establishment code, with the post-1997 disaster staying on the road a few days longer despite the abundant signs of its imminent collapse.
Cameron has exercised terrible judgement on a recurring basis. His cosying up to China and the repeated refrain of a supposed ‘golden age of Sino-British relations’ preceded the Covid-19 era and saw a deepening of questionable ties between that rising global behemoth and British institutions. He recklessly intervened in Libya, throwing the country into a further state of disarray from which it is yet to recover. To put him in charge of foreign affairs is like asking Augustus Gloop to guard a delicious chocolate cake.
Most pathetic of all was his – Cameron’s, not Gloop’s - behaviour following the 2016 Brexit referendum. Having lost the vote, he instantly resigned, triggering years of political turmoil. It was the political equivalent of throwing one’s toys out the pram. Immigration, too, remained entirely unstemmed during his leadership, with hollow claims of reducing inward numbers to the ‘tens of thousands’ baseless lies designed to placate his core vote.
Perhaps what is shocking about his reappointment is the sheer brazenness of what it represents. There have been attempts by Sunak in recent times to sound a bit more conservative - admittedly not hard when your views are indistinguishable from Nick Clegg’s – but these were always terrible unconvincing, with Sunak always uncomfortable in the performative act of throwing red meat to his core vote. Inviting back David Cameron vindicates those who maintained throughout that Sunak doesn’t have a conservative bone in his body.
Britain’s brief dalliance with a potential political realignment is well and truly sunk. Any dreams of a different, post-Brexit settlement is utterly gone (not that that hasn’t been clear for many years already). The grey suits are back and it is business as normal, as it ever was.
Ultimately there are few parties less deserving of power than the Conservative Party. There are fewer leaders less worthy of guiding a state at our perilous juncture than Sunak, even coming after the pygmies of Cameron, May, Johnson and Truss.
Yet ultimately it is up to the British public to demonstrate that they are worthy of being led by anything other than a craven, inept gang of globalists. So far, they have shown little stomach for the fight.
As the days roll by, however, it becomes obvious to more and more that what we are ultimately fighting for is the soul of the nation and the continued existence of our culture and civilisation. It’s enough to wake many out of their slumber. With every institution in thrall to postmodern anti-Westernism, however, there will be no reform through the system as-is.
Smart money is on an exogenous shock dislodging our effete and disconnected ruling elite who, regardless of what else you can say about them, have a knack of holding desperately on to power.
What we are witnessing is the rounding off of a full-on Remainer/ Establishment coup, the complete and final repudiation of both the 2016 Brexit Referendum and the 2019 General Election. Cameron the man who gave us such pearlers as "I hope to see a Muslim Prime Minister", "Diversity is our strength" and "Islam is a Religion of Peace" and that's before we look at the carnage left behind by his policies both at home and abroad, the man who ran away from a mess of his own making, whistling as he did so, quite possibly the most monumentally stupid and shallow prime minister the UK has ever had in its history
I have totally given up on political parties.
My view is that our leaders are not incompetent or spineless or unintelligent. On the contrary I think they are deeply intelligent and deeply malign and are constantly trying to deceive us.
They all have the same hidden agenda and they are controlled by the same international Money Men. You may not agree with me, but in my view the only way forward is to abolish the party political system in Westminster altogether and make every MP an independent contractually bound to their constituents. If any MPs break their contractual duties they can be legally removed directly by their constituents. Constituents will then be able to directly insist on their MPs doing what the constituents want at all times, without the intervention of political parties.
I did write a brief article in pdf ("The Political Party system must be abolished") explaining my views in more detail. You probably have no interest whatsoever in my opinions on this, however, should you be interested you may download a copy of that article with the following link:
https://TheCounterRevolution.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/TCR/Article-The-Political-Party-system-must-be-abolished-(November-2023).pdf