They are politicians. Streeting isn't the best doctor in the land. Bridget isn't the best teacher in the land. Our defence minister isn't the best soldier in the land.
They have experts that are the best in the land...or should be...that makes sure their ideas are workable.
That was the problem with the last rabble. Johnson was an insane liar. Truss was just insane. Sunak was incapable of leading. It was a disaster for 14 years. Cameron thought austerity was the answer. When in fact his chancellor got the maths wrong. Hannah Fry explains it better than me. But he got his maths wrong. He ignored the advice and sunk us into sacking nearly half the army, police and every other public service.
Let's give Rachel a chance to fudge up before we pile on.
I'm sorry but I think you're so far down the party rabbit hole you can't see the wood for the trees. It's easy to throw around stuff like "Boris Johnson is an insane liar" because that's what you've heard lots of people that detest him say countless times. He certainly hasn't lied about anything like this, I.e. who he is, his past or his qualifications and/or experience.
On the point about Osbourne: you defend Reeves by saying actually it doesn't matter how honest our politicians are about their experience or even how competent they are, as they just do as they're advised to do. But then you ignore pretty much your entire argument by claiming that Osbourne did his own sums, went rogue and implemented an unnecessary period of austerity. It really beggars believe.
Every country implemented austerity in the wake of the financial crash. In fact, Britain's austerity was mild compared to some. In Greece, which was subject to an ECB bailout, you had civil servants jumping off buildings as their pensions had been taken off them.
I'll try and explain in layman's terms:
- At the heart of the financial crisis, was a loss of liquidity within the banking sector, which meant banks couldn't lend at the rates necessary to sustain normal economic activity. This led to a loss of liquidity within the economy as a whole ("there is no money left").
- in 2010, when Osbourne took office, the UK government was running a budget deficit of around 10% of GDP. This meant it was committed to borrowing 10% of Britain's entire GDP every year unless something changed.
- The huge issue with this is that governments borrow by issuing assets (basically IOUs) to the capital markets and the primary purchasers and traders of these assets are banks. But when a bank purchases a government asset, it locks capital away in the asset and reduces its own liquidity (I.e. banks were having to use a lot of their remaining capital supporting government borrowing rather than doing what the government needed them to do, to arrest the rampant business closures and job losses going on in the economy, and that is to start lending to businesses and each other again.
- The government had to rapidly reduce the budget deficit and couldn't use growth as the means of doing so before recapitalising the banking sector by reducing government borrowing and other means.
- There was absolutely no choice but to reduce the deficit via drastic public spending cuts.
Anyone who says otherwise isn't worth listening to.