In a development that has sent shockwaves through the golden state, California Governor Gavin Newsom finds himself the subject of a Justice Department probe. Sources whisper of dark goings-on, backroom deals, and the sort of administrative shenanigans that make even the most jaded political hack choke on his breakfast kipper. The specifics remain tantalisingly vague, like a half-remembered dream after a bottle of cheap sherry. But the implication is clear: Governor Golden Boy might have some explaining to do.
Meanwhile, across the pond, the British establishment puffs out its chest and declares itself scandal-free. Oh, what a magnificent fiction! We are a nation where the only thing cleaner than our governance is the gin in a Westminster bar. Never mind the MPs caught with their hands in the expenses till, the peers who trade favours for cash, the ministers who forget to declare their holidays on yachts. No, no. Britain stands resolute, a beacon of integrity in a world of moral turpitude. Let the Americans squabble over their Newsoms and their Trumps. We have the stiff upper lip of Peter Mandelson, the noble probity of Boris Johnson, the unimpeachable ethical compass of the entire House of Lords.
What sublime hypocrisy! The Justice Department probe into Newsom is undoubtedly a serious matter. Perhaps he misallocated funds for high-speed rail. Perhaps he traded pandemic contracts for political favours. Perhaps he simply wore the wrong shade of beige to a press conference. The truth will out, as it always does in the land of the free and the home of the brave. But let us not pretend that the British body politic is a virtuous maiden. We are a nation that gave the world the Profumo affair, the cash-for-questions scandal, and the parliamentary expenses debacle. We are a country where the phrase 'to be honest' is a prelude to a lie. And yet, we gaze across the Atlantic with smug condescension.
The irony is so thick you could slice it with a blunt knife and serve it on toast. Newsom's probe is a reminder that justice is blind, but it has a fine sense of smell when there is something rotten in the state. And while the DOJ sharpens its scalpels, Britain continues its grand tradition of sweeping scandals under the royal carpet. But fear not, dear reader. Your correspondent has taken a vow to skewer hypocrisy wherever it lurks, be it in California or Camberwell. I will not rest until the last suit is stripped of his pretensions and the last gin bottle is empty.
So let Newsom squirm. Let the Justice Department dig. But let us also cast a critical eye on our own dear land, where scandal is a ghost that haunts only the opposition benches. Britain remains scandal-free? Only if you define scandal as something that actually gets prosecuted. In that case, we are as pure as the driven snow, albeit snow that has been trampled by a herd of rutting stags and sprayed with cheap perfume. Long live the empire of self-delusion!











