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As the Covid Inquiry rolls into it's eighty-third year, give or take, Matt Hancock takes the stand for the umpteenth time.  Yes, of course he still can't find his WhatsApp messages from that period (but probably can for ten years before and every day since) and everyone is resigned to the inevitable fact that practically every billion pounds his department spent over Covid was to someone who he apparently knew or even occasionally worked for or drank a beer with or shagged.  Or possibly shagged not so occasionally.  Possibly daily, dependent on the Covid restrictions in place at the time.  Or possibly not, it is possible he inadvertently didn't follow the rules he helped shape because they kept changing and nobody told him.  Not even when he looked in the mirror.


His big success, apart from his friends' bank balances, appears to be the ring of steel he threw around care homes.  Or would have if steel was in plentiful supply, that is if he had a friend or lover or party donor who made steel.  Not that steel would have made a difference, it isn't known to have any practical benefits against Covid.  So blaming him because the ring of steel he didn't throw around the care homes is just plain silly.  And his recollection is that he didn't claim to throw a ring of steel around anything is possibly true, although he could have been talking about a cock ring, in which case it's plausible.  Because despite of all the restrictions, rules and regulations he drafted, talked about and ultimately ignored he must have needed something to keep his pecker up during that period.  So, yes, he probably did throw a ring of steel around his widge occasionally and inadvertently said 'care homes' instead of 'cock'.  Happens all the time, apparently. To victims, not villains, obviously.




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A spokesperson for Rachel Reeves has confirmed that the Chancellor wants to cut the amount of money that can be invested tax free in a cash ISA will be reduced from the current £20k per annum to about £5k.  The £20k limit will be maintained for those who want to invest (that is, lose) their money in a stocks and shares ISA.


Billy, 34, who rents a two bedroomed flat with his wife while they save for a deposit on a house is fuming.  'Every penny I can, I save.  I saved nearly three thousand pounds last year after paying for rent, council tax, food and travel.  I wanted to save twenty thousand this year and might have been on track as my wife has been buying bread from Aldi lately.


Alex also wants the right to save twenty thousand tax free every year, has had that aspiration for ten years now, has 'about fifty quid' in her ISA.  'It's about aiming for the top,' she said, ordering a latte. 'Oops, that's this month's savings shot,' she said.


Bill, 69, is relaxed about the change.  'I retired years ago, inherited my dad's place, pushed £20k a year into ISAs.  I've got a bloody fortune sheltered so why not speculate in stocks and shares?  It's not like my liver will outlive my savings,' he pointed out. 




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The government has announced that the Welfare Bill has been passed but has suffered some serious attrition while on it's journey through Parliament.  'We've had it assessed by an experienced PIP assessor who has declared it to be limping terribly due to cuts imposed by the government, will need round the clock care and is incapable of performing its basic task, which is to save Rachel Reeves about £5 Billion and her job,' said a government spokesperson.


It's expected that the care package put together for the Bill will be arbitrarily ripped away without notice soon.  'It's what we do,' added the spokesman.




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