Anonymous ID: f1c837 Nov. 2, 2018, 5:44 p.m. No.3707113   🗄️.is 🔗kun

If you’ve ever wondered why British politics is in such a mess look no further than a leaked report into Civil Service skullduggery during the Windrush scandal.

 

It shows how early in 2018 former Home Secretary Amber Rudd was made inadvertently to lie about Britain’s immigration policy because her scheming civil servants had withheld the truth from her.

 

This was in a period of shocking news stories about mostly elderly West-Indian-born immigrants who’d been living legally and contentedly in Britain for decades – only to find themselves threatened with deportation (or in some cases, actually deported) by an increasingly draconian Home Office.

 

As a result, the government was made to look incompetent and heartless, while the very idea of having a strong immigration policy – which is what most people in Britain want – was discredited as cruel and unfair: a gift, of course, to the Guardian and Jeremy Corbyn.

 

Rudd felt compelled to resign from her position.

 

I have it on good authority that one of the main reasons Theresa May has been able to remain Prime Minister so long, despite being so singularly useless at the job, is that she has forged a devil’s pact with the civil service.

 

The Civil Service gets to police all her cabinet ministers – spying on their every move, like the Stasi; watering down their speeches; nipping in the bud anything that looks remotely like disloyalty or a leadership bid. In return, Theresa May allows herself to be run like the Civil Service’s puppet.

 

Theresa May’s government, in other words, is essentially a willing prisoner of the Deep State.

 

The politics of Whitehall – Europhile, politically correct, Nanny Statist – are far to the left of the cabinet and even further to the left of the Conservative grassroots. Yet because these jumped up civil servants have been given carte blanche by the Prime Minister herself to run the show, ministers and MPs are powerless to fight back.

https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2018/11/02/amber-rudd-windrush-and-the-deep-state/