William Wragg MP
Hello and welcome to this week’s version of Britain’s favourite Sunday sermon, have I got news for you. Yes, good news indeed we’ve got a new award yes, it’s not hypocrite of the week, not hypocrite of the month or indeed of the year we have a new award for hypocrite of the 21st century, it’s that significant and we have a candidate for this award and I think we should get everybody involved so I’d like you to join in.
I’d like you to imagine that you are Vice chairman of a very important committee about standards about Behaviour, imagine you’re chairman of an even more important committee about public administration and constitutional affairs, I mean this is serious stuff. You need to be a person of great integrity of probity and of good judgment.
Just put yourself in those shoes so good are you at this matter of integrity and probity that when anybody in the place that you work which might happen to be for example the House of Commons, I mean serious stuff this, that if someone doesn’t do things properly if they exercise misjudgement then of course you call for them to resign, no ifs, no butts.
So imagine that you called for the Prime Minister to resign because he brought his own party into disrepute, he damaged the reputation of his own party because he attended parties involving cake. Imagine that you called for another Prime Minister of your own party to resign after just a few days because they exercised misjudgement.
Serious Misjudgement
I mean just think about that, imagine if you called for none other than the Speaker of the House of Commons to resign over his misjudgements on a debate about calling for a ceasefire in the Middle East between Hamas and between the state of Israel.
I mean these are serious matters, people have made misjudgements but you are the man of probity, integrity, solid judgment you call for them to resign, no ifs, no butts whatsoever.
Imagine if also when you hear that MPs might be being subject to blackmail that you stand up in the House of Commons and you say that anybody who is a victim of blackmail should report it to the Speaker of the House of Commons and of course you should report it to the Metropolitan Police. I mean this is a man that we should listen to.
This is a man of great high standing, clearly and you might think of someone of decades and decades, someone in their 60s or 70s almost like the father of the house who’s seen it all before, but no, this is someone so exceptional that they’re in their 30s, a man of relative youth but great judgment and probity.
So when that person then becomes exposed, he’s been attacked himself or being targeted for texting or sexting, I mean if he was asked to send a picture of himself to someone he didn’t know, I’m talking about a picture fully clothed, I wouldn’t do that why, would I imagine being asked to send a picture of yourself unclothed?
Tory MP Blackmailed
Then you become a victim yourself of blackmail so then what do you do? Well of course if you are a man of probity and integrity you follow your own good advice, you report it to the Speaker of the House of Commons, you report it to the Metropolitan Police as you advised other people to do.
Is that what you do? That’s what you told other people to do. You told other people to resign when they demonstrated a lack of judgment and then, it comes to your judgment, you know instead of following your own good advice you say, actually I tell you what I’m going to do.
I’m going to send the personal telephone numbers of very important elected members of parliament to someone I don’t know, who I’ve met on some website, unbelievable. I mean talk about a complete and utter failure of judgment.
It’s hard to think of anything more significant than this. I mean this is potentially putting people’s security at risk and we live sadly in an age when the security of members of the houses of Parliament is at risk. There’s a serious question mark about it, tens of millions of pounds of taxpayer’s cash goes to protecting those members of parliament but you, just willy-nilly, just send out a bunch of telephone numbers of important people.
A horrific lapse of judgment, well of course you must follow your own advice, you must step down, surely certainly step down as being vice chair of an important committee on standards and behaviour, step down as being chair of a committee on constitutional affairs.
Victim or Naive?
I mean that’s the very least you should do. What you should do is step down as being a member of parliament for this grotesque appalling security lapse of judgment. I mean if you’re that good at advising other people when to resign, surely you should know when to resign. How’s this game going folks? What do you think you would have done?
Would you have decided, well other people need to follow my advice, I must follow my own advice or would you actually say no, now this is me I’m talking about I’m above it all, I don’t need to follow my own advice. I don’t need to follow the advice that I’ve given to other people. I don’t need to resign; I’m just going to brazen it out and claim that I was a victim.
I mean the double standards the hypocrisy knows no bounds whatsoever, truly unbelievable and if you believe in equality, if you believe in the 2010 equalities act, then surely, we’re all one and the same. It doesn’t matter what sex you are, what faith you are, what colour you are, what gender you are, whether you’re heterosexual, homosexual or bit of each frankly, no one cares.
It’s about standards and probity for heaven’s sake. Get a grip, do the right thing but oh no, in this case it’s seems to be different.
I don’t think it’s different at all, I think what we’re seeing is a nominee for the candidate of the greatest hypocrite in the United Kingdom in the 21st century.
I think that candidate should be nominated, I think that candidate is a Mr William Wragg MP and he is my nominee and award winner for the greatest hypocrite so far in the 21st century. Truly unbelievable, enjoy your day here endeth my Sunday sermon
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