Quote from: Andy B on November 15, 2022, 07:04:39 pmQuote from: Will Hunt on November 15, 2022, 06:09:23 pmIncredible to see Boy George slate Hancock as a rule breaker. Boy George has done actual jail time after he tied a male escort to a radiator and beat him with a metal chain.Ah, but Boy George wasn’t telling other people not to tie male escorts to radiators and beat them with metal chains, while he did it.Also, Boy George was tried and punished for his behaviour, he served his time. Hancock.... has not.
Quote from: Will Hunt on November 15, 2022, 06:09:23 pmIncredible to see Boy George slate Hancock as a rule breaker. Boy George has done actual jail time after he tied a male escort to a radiator and beat him with a metal chain.Ah, but Boy George wasn’t telling other people not to tie male escorts to radiators and beat them with metal chains, while he did it.
Incredible to see Boy George slate Hancock as a rule breaker. Boy George has done actual jail time after he tied a male escort to a radiator and beat him with a metal chain.
And I'm wondering why going AWOL isn't gross misconduct, as it is in most jobs.
Don’t members of parliament have contractual obligations to their employer?
Quote from: mrjonathanr on November 16, 2022, 07:13:29 amDon’t members of parliament have contractual obligations to their employer?No, they don't. They're answerable only to their constituents, otherwise Boris Johnson would have been fired years ago for never doing anything that wasn't about himself. Parties can remove the whip, as has happened to Hancock but they remain MP for their constituency.
Quote from: TobyD on November 16, 2022, 07:34:47 amQuote from: mrjonathanr on November 16, 2022, 07:13:29 amDon’t members of parliament have contractual obligations to their employer?No, they don't. They're answerable only to their constituents, otherwise Boris Johnson would have been fired years ago for never doing anything that wasn't about himself. Parties can remove the whip, as has happened to Hancock but they remain MP for their constituency.Kathryn Stone (standards commissioner) was talking about this yesterday. She has had lots of complaints about Matt Hancock going away for such a long time, but as there’s no code of conduct for that kind of thing there’s nothing to actually investigate. She was pretty frustrated by it!
Quote from: James Malloch on November 16, 2022, 08:04:56 amQuote from: TobyD on November 16, 2022, 07:34:47 amQuote from: mrjonathanr on November 16, 2022, 07:13:29 amDon’t members of parliament have contractual obligations to their employer?No, they don't. They're answerable only to their constituents, otherwise Boris Johnson would have been fired years ago for never doing anything that wasn't about himself. Parties can remove the whip, as has happened to Hancock but they remain MP for their constituency.Kathryn Stone (standards commissioner) was talking about this yesterday. She has had lots of complaints about Matt Hancock going away for such a long time, but as there’s no code of conduct for that kind of thing there’s nothing to actually investigate. She was pretty frustrated by it!Long live the uncodified constitution! Let the "good chap" principle sort it out............
Presumably there are other politicians standing in Hanncock's constituency? Members of the public can freely vote for them if they don't like what Hanncock stands for. It doesn't appear to require a witch hunt, just an election.
I don't, to be honest have a big problem with Hancock doing what he's doing, his constituents can judge him on that, as I'm sure they will at the next election.
Hancock is discussing his actions and defending himself in front of a bunch of second rate celebs - this is a completely inappropriate place in which to be talking about the life and death decisions he made. There is no proper scrutiny, no informed questioning, and turning the mistakes which killed our loved ones into entertainment is just gross.
Saying this appalling behaviour is simply a matter for his constituents is deeply unfair on them too: what if they hate Hancock’s appearance on the show but happen to be centre right? Those people - and all the voters in his constituency - deserve a clean candidate to represent them.
You have to wonder how much of this is him trying to get ahead of the inquiry and set the narrative (“he seemed like a decent guy on the telly and he was just trying his best” yada yada).
Quote from: seankenny on November 16, 2022, 11:44:44 am Saying this appalling behaviour is simply a matter for his constituents is deeply unfair on them too: what if they hate Hancock’s appearance on the show but happen to be centre right? Those people - and all the voters in his constituency - deserve a clean candidate to represent them.I think it’s a matter for them as they are the only ones who can change his standing if he’s not actually breaking any parliamentary rules? The local conservative party could vote to deselect him and stand another candidate
what are you suggesting? That fundamentally he *isn't* a decent but flawed human like the rest of us? And that he wanted to do his worst?
I don’t think he intentionally tried to kill people but IMO he almost certainly made decisions with other interests in mind (procurement contracts with Tory donors, links to horse racing / Cheltenham festival, dido harding appointment, optics of people dying in hospital vs hidden away in care homes, etc etc) - rather than purely in the public interest.
Quote from: ali k on November 16, 2022, 11:57:38 amYou have to wonder how much of this is him trying to get ahead of the inquiry and set the narrative (“he seemed like a decent guy on the telly and he was just trying his best” yada yada).That's the obvious conclusion. Distasteful as it is.For the bit in bold - what are you suggesting? That fundamentally he *isn't* a decent but flawed human like the rest of us? And that he wanted to do his worst?
this doesn't strike me as being all that different; as in a manager who causes the death of an employee through incompetence and / or negligence can be prosecuted and jailed, regardless of the decency of their intentions. If it were proven that Matt Hancock's actions were the cause of covid deaths (and an ITV reality show is clearly not the forum through which that can be judged), then he should face the same fate in my view.
Quote from: petejh on November 16, 2022, 12:16:40 pmQuote from: ali k on November 16, 2022, 11:57:38 amYou have to wonder how much of this is him trying to get ahead of the inquiry and set the narrative (“he seemed like a decent guy on the telly and he was just trying his best” yada yada).That's the obvious conclusion. Distasteful as it is.For the bit in bold - what are you suggesting? That fundamentally he *isn't* a decent but flawed human like the rest of us? And that he wanted to do his worst?Decency is not an excuse for incompetence. We have a gross negligence manslaughter law when it comes to death in the course of someone's employment, this doesn't strike me as being all that different; as in a manager who causes the death of an employee through incompetence and / or negligence can be prosecuted and jailed, regardless of the decency of their intentions. If it were proven that Matt Hancock's actions were the cause of covid deaths (and an ITV reality show is clearly not the forum through which that can be judged), then he should face the same fate in my view.
Hancock is discussing his actions and defending himself in front of a bunch of second rate celebs