Well done for your continued exposure of David Cameron’s dubious links with Greensill (News, last week), but the real issue here is how the opportunity for this kind of thing may be corruptly
Fiona Collins
If Boris Johnson believes he has done his best, he should be replaced by someone who can do better, writes Jane Deighton. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
If Boris Johnson believes he has done his best, he should be replaced by someone who can do better, writes Jane Deighton. Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
Wed 27 Jan 2021 12.59 EST
Last modified on Thu 28 Jan 2021 14.53 EST
The specifics of the failures of the UK government to manage a public health crisis have been long documented and are well-known â notwithstanding the fact that they continue not to be addressed, crucially, for example, in the still lamentable test-and-trace system, the disastrous inadequacies of financial support for isolation, and the misleadingly labelled âlockdownâ, under which in fact millions are still effectively forced to travel to work and school (âIâm deeply sorryâ: Boris Johnson faces questions over UK Covid death tollâ, 26 January).