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Missing in-action

(212 Posts)
CvD66 Sun 17-Jul-22 09:44:06

First the PM avoided 5 significant Cobra meetings when COVID was gripping the nation. Now he has ‘missed’ the heatwave Cobra meeting. Who cares if a few more old people die - there was a party to plan!

Aveline Sun 17-Jul-22 21:32:58

volver good leaders delegate. Presenteeism isn't always necessary. It would be more useful to have Baggs there by the sound of it!grin

Iam64 Sun 17-Jul-22 20:28:49

Pity you aren’t in government Baggs, simple solutions to com-lex problems - job done

MayBee70 Sun 17-Jul-22 20:16:45

Baggs

Just seen your latest post, casdon. If roads melt that much there will certainly be problems but, again, what exactly is government supposed to do about that right now?

I've recently seen stuff about road-making in India where they have used waste plastic in road surfaces. Apparently the surfaces last much longer and are less likely to get pot-holey, etc. India's a hot country. We, that is our government, could perhaps pay attention to such innovations, learn a thing or two, and act upon this new knowledge for future reference.

Meanwhile, what is the news about melting roads? No telly and it's not hot here. I have doubts that road melting will be such an issue that it's a national emergency but am happy to be better informed.

Those roads may be ok in a hot country but they probably wouldn’t cope with rain snow and ice.

volver Sun 17-Jul-22 20:08:17

What do you think Prime Ministers are for Aveline? Here's a hint: Leadership. Taking ownership. Making things happen. Taking accountability.

Aveline Sun 17-Jul-22 19:25:19

Oh if only Boris could have attended that meeting none of this would be happening...oh wait...

lemsip Sun 17-Jul-22 17:54:38

bitumen is melting on roads in some parts of country!
copied and pasted.

Gritters are being taken out of hibernation to save the nation's melting roads some county councils
have been using sand to 'dust' several routes, to prevent bitumen from melting.

Iam64 Sun 17-Jul-22 17:52:24

Several of us pointed out our infrastructure isn’t designed for extreme weather because it’s been uncommon

Lucca Sun 17-Jul-22 17:48:23

Baggs

Iam64

Johnson decided to stay in his role as PM till September. He’s drawing a salary and should be earning it. His contempt for Cobra meetings is clear.
The Uk infrastructure isn’t set up for extreme weather because we get little of it. This Cobra was focussed on managing and protecting the infra structure. Eg our rail lines may buckle in the kind of temps predicted, train times to be doubled in the hope slowing the trains protects the infrastructure and people using it.
CEO ‘s of large organisations get sacked for avoiding stuff they find boring.

Why are buckling rails and doubling train times the government's responsibility? Why aren't they the responsibility of rail makers and train-running companies?

Hot countries, like India, have railways. How do they manage their extremely hot temperatures?

I suppose ministers, including the PM, could put rescue operations in place when they hear about buckling rails and stuck trains full of stuck people. But I daresay they will do that.

Unless multiple rails and multiple trains and hordesof people are affected, it's still not a national emergency.

BUt it needs to be discussed ! Options considered etc, And if there is a Cobra meeting (whether you think it necessary or not) then the PM should attend.

Casdon Sun 17-Jul-22 17:37:36

JenniferEccles

Can very hot weather lasting just a couple of days really be called a national emergency, requiring the PM’s undivided attention?
Honestly?
According to my weather app the temperature is due to drop by about 15 degrees on Wednesday at home in the south east and by Tuesday here in the south west where we are on holiday.
In fact rain is forecast Tuesday.

Do you think you know better than the experts who constitute COBRA and their advisory bodies what constitutes a national emergency JenniferEccles? Obviously so.

Zonne Sun 17-Jul-22 17:32:41

If managing one part of his role requires his undivided attention full time, he's in the wrong job. If he is not able or willing to attend to the duties he is paid for, he's in the wrong job. If he prioritises his personal life over checking whether there needs to be a national response to a situation that falls within his remit, he's in the wrong job.

JenniferEccles Sun 17-Jul-22 17:28:40

Can very hot weather lasting just a couple of days really be called a national emergency, requiring the PM’s undivided attention?
Honestly?
According to my weather app the temperature is due to drop by about 15 degrees on Wednesday at home in the south east and by Tuesday here in the south west where we are on holiday.
In fact rain is forecast Tuesday.

Dickens Sun 17-Jul-22 17:25:33

sharon103

Baggs

What exactly would people have the PM do right now about the heatwave? Put aside for a moment the fact that it's Boris Johnson. What would you have any PM do in a summer heatwave that isn't already being done?

The Met Office has been warning people for days. I don't have a telly but I expect there has been masses of advice on how to stay cool enough to survive.

Yes, there are especially vulnerable people such as babies and very old people but they are being (or should be) looked after already.

Exactly Baggs.
Surely we use are own common sense.
Like a puppy chewing at a slipper Boris, they just can't let go can they.

Well you could use some of that common sense to understand that an infrastructure needs to function - especially those bits of it that might physically be affected by the heat like roads (tarmac is melting so they are out gritting it), rail lines, etc.
And a heatwave affects power supplies... an increase in heat, increases resistance, and that means less power gets through, so there could be outages.

The idea is that someone co-ordinates all of these responses if necessary, which is what governments do - hence COBRA.

And as Johnson is the Prime Minister, he should be there conducting the orchestra.

Yammy Sun 17-Jul-22 17:09:02

mokryna

Hé should leave now and let someone who is more suitable stand in until September, T. May?

I'll second that but I doubt she would want to they asked her the other evening and she said no.

Dickens Sun 17-Jul-22 17:04:15

Baggs

If social services and carers (visiting or in homes for the elderly) are doing their jobs properly, why does government need to be involved in looking after (how, anyway?) old people at risk from the effects of a summer heatwave?

... but the heatwave isn't just about the elderly.

It's having an effect on transport (thus travel), work, supplies, schools, etc.

The PM is not expected to 'look after' anyone, but in an emergency, he needs to be informed and capable of dealing with whatever might arise from it.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:33:09

One thing I hope they addressed are the enormous Brexit queues of lorries in Kent. The poor drivers will really suffer in the heat.

Urmstongran Sun 17-Jul-22 16:28:57

Isn’t Parliament about to go into its summer recess anyway for 6 weeks? Business as usual behind the scenes but effectively a pretty fallow time till the first week of September. I’m sure everything will tick over as per.

Zonne Sun 17-Jul-22 16:27:23

It’s already been declared a national
emergency, whether individuals think it should be or not.

So the role of the government (via COBRA) is to decide on responses at a national level. So, for example, one of the things that COBRA chose to do was to make national funding available to allow more emergency call centre staff to be able to work.

I’m not sure how putting something on the TV would have done that. And no, local police and ambulance services can’t afford to pay for it from their own budgets.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:26:15

Those talking about using ones common sense etc sound like those saying the country’s budget is just a matter of good housekeeping???

Whitewavemark2 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:24:41

Ilovecheese

So are we just accepting now that our Prime Minister is so useless that it doesn't matter whether he is present at Cobra meetings, because he has nothing of value to contribute.

I don’t accept it. I am bloody furious that we have to put up with such an apology for a prime minister, who frankly is taking the p..s.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:21:11

Of course national emergencies should be taken seriously.

Unquestionably.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:20:17

Mind you I see the missing PM has gone missing before now.

Report in the Observer today.

The Salisbury poisoning, prompted a high profile meeting of the NATO chiefs and foreign ministers of NATO countries - attack one you attack all, and Salisbury was considered a chemical attack on a NATO country.

Jordon was the foreign minister.

Immediately after the meeting Johnson along with NATO documents went missing - without his security people etc.

In fact he flew to a residence owned by a high ranking KGB member and spent the weekend with him.

Johnson was seen and photoed by a British traveller, on his apparent return to the U.K.
Johnson looked “very much worse for wear, and as if he’d slept in his clothes”

In my opinion, Johnson has a huge amount to answer, and deliberately missing Cobra meetings are the least of our worries.

The Russia report was never fully published. We need answers.

Iam64 Sun 17-Jul-22 16:01:09

Baggs -weather (or other things) that threaten life are what Cobra does

Oopsadaisy1 Sun 17-Jul-22 15:58:56

But the meeting went ahead didn’t it?

Whether or not the PM showed up decisions were made regardless.

Not being sympathetic to BJ but he isn’t the one who comes up with the solutions to the problems that may or may not be caused by the Weather, I’m sure there are experts who will make the decisions and be held accountable if it all goes pear shaped. ( like the railway lines).

Chestnut Sun 17-Jul-22 15:58:50

Just for the record, Mumbai in India and Uganda (on the Equator) are both cooler at the moment than the expected temperatures in the UK Monday and Tuesday.

Casdon Sun 17-Jul-22 15:53:26

You’re not listening to what people are saying Baggs, I’m not sure if it’s because it doesn’t fit your narrative about the PM, or if it’s because you don’t think that a meeting of the National Emergencies Committee is necessary? If it’s the latter then you’re wrong, that is what Cobra is there to do, to contingency plan for the potentially direst consequences of whatever the country is facing. It’s not relevant that it’s more likely things won’t happen than that they will, and disputing specific issues is unhelpful, because we don’t actually know the detail of what the potential consequences might be, do we?