The uproar was deafening. A man who has captained the titanic and avoided the calls to change direction. The man who was listening to the corporate owners of the ship not the passengers. The man who cheated on his family with the maid in the captain’s quarters while his family were bailing out with a bucket.
The man who killed thousands and feigned tears on live TV.
The man who was offered a job by the UN in Africa and then had it pulled away when they found out exactly what the public thought of his devastation.
Given with the one hand:
Matt Hancock’s new job offer from the United Nations helping African economies recover from the coronavirus pandemic has been withdrawn, Sky News understands.
Just four days ago, the former health secretary announced on social media his new role as a United Nations special representative, saying he was “honoured” to have been appointed to the position.
But it is believed Mr Hancock, who resigned from his cabinet post in June for breaking social distancing guidelines by kissing his aide, will no longer be taking up the role.
It is understood that a major issue with the appointment is that the UN cannot appoint sitting parliamentarians and Mr Hancock has no plans to resign his West Suffolk constituency seat.
On Tuesday, he posted a copy of the letter from UN Under-Secretary General Vera Songwe offering him the unpaid role on Twitter.
In the letter, Ms Songwe praised Mr Hancock’s “success on the United Kingdom’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the acceleration of vaccines”.
Mr Hancock posted: “Honoured to be appointed United Nations Special Representative. I’ll be working with the United Nations and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa to help African economic recovery from the pandemic and promote sustainable development.”
Many of Mr Hancock’s former cabinet colleagues – including Housing Secretary Michael Gove, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss and new Health Secretary Sajid Javid – went on social media to congratulate the former health secretary on his new appointment earlier this week.
Mr Gove said: “Wishing Matt Hancock well in this critical role supporting the developing world at a crucial time.”
Ms Truss said: “Congratulations Matt Hancock.”
And Mr Javid added: “Best wishes Matt Hancock with the new role.”
But Mr Hancock received a backlash from many on social media after an extremely critical report from MPs into the handling of the coronavirus pandemic was published on the same day as his new job announcement.
The report said delays and mistakes by both ministers and their scientific advisers “rank as one of the most important public health failures the United Kingdom has ever experienced”.
Responding to Mr Hancock’s new job announcement when it was revealed on Tuesday, Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now – part of the People’s Vaccine Alliance demanding global vaccine equity – said: “Matt Hancock helped to block international efforts to allow low and middle-income countries to produce their own COVID-19 vaccines, leading to millions of deaths in the global south.
“The audacity of this man claiming to help African nations and promote sustainable development is sickening.”
A statement from the COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK added it does not know how Mr Hancock “has the time to take up this new role given he seemingly hasn’t been able to pass emails from his personal Gmail account that relate to his handling of the pandemic to the Department of Health or government”.
Mr Hancock’s original tweet from Tuesday announcing his role has not been removed.
Taken away with the other:
Who better to summarise Matthew Dastardly than Jonathan Pie:
Douglas James
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