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Issue: ‘Partygate’

Your boss (i.e. the Prime Minister) has been issued a fixed penalty notice for attending a party in contravention of the government’s (i.e. his) Covid regulations. This is one of several problematic gatherings the Prime Minister is suspected of attending. The Prime Minister will be addressing the House of Commons to respond to this historic occasion (he is the first sitting PM to be found to have broken the law while in office).

Context

Partygate has been hammering your boss for months now. It’s only with the war in Ukraine – and process cover afforded by the Met Police investigation – that coverage has slowed. For weeks now, the line has been to ignore ‘partygate’ because other issues – Ukraine, cost of living – require the Prime Minister and government’s full attention making now not the ideal time to change horses.

As the PM prepares to address the House, it remains unclear whether the Metropolitan Police will be issuing further notices for any other gatherings. Meanwhile, former Cabinet Office mandarin Sue Gray is yet to publish her report into the parties (completed before the Met announced their investigation). Adding further uncertainty is the fact ex-No.10 staff Dominic Cummings and Lee Cain might also brief further damaging material should the Prime Minister be seen to be escaping sanction.

The ‘line to take’

“It’s not as if [Boris Johnson] walked into a rave in Ibiza.”

  1. A senior government source

Line review

Our initial response: Yikes. 

For one, the tone is waaaaay too dismissive. It also leaves several obvious rejoinders including: ‘It’s not as if people could see their dying loved ones in hospital at the time.’ For that matter, it also reminds voters of all of the travel they had to forsake because of the pandemic.

To be fair, there is no ‘great’ line to take given the relatively poor cards held by No. 10 on partygate, which is why No. 10 have been appealing for a sense of perspective in their briefings, per the above line. And while the fixed penalty notice received by the Prime Minister clearly isn’t equivalent to, say, murder, it is a violation of the law, a first for an occupant of No. 10. Then there is the related question of whether the PM misled Parliament in his responses to questions about partygate – which is the most serious wrongdoing a PM can commit under our system of government. 

The trouble with No. 10’s line is that even the most minor of parties is a major party given most people in the country were not only not partying at the time, but also not attending any funerals, weddings, or leaving their house, on to the recommendation – and this is the important bit – of the government and public health experts at the time.

Put differently, most people aren’t judging on an ‘Ibiza vs. quiet back garden gathering’ scale, i.e. as a matter of degree, they’re judging on a ‘right vs. wrong’ scale, i.e. as a matter of principle. A better line would have acknowledged the principle and *then* brazened it out. 

The line is also a hostage to fortune; it suggests that a more vibrant party – even if not quite Ibiza-esque – would be problematic and worthy of sanction/approbation. It invites voters to judge each gathering on No. 10’s Ibiza scale. This is obviously a problem when the Met has yet to issue fixed penalty notices for other parties we know of that are, on their face, more problematic than the cabinet room cake party for which the PM (and chancellor) have already been sanctioned.

Line rating:

Blinder

Strong

Does the job

Problematic

Piss poor

  • Apr 15, 2022
  • 5 min read

Good morning,

Under The Radar was launched at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic with the noble aim of shining a light on the important stories that were being overlooked by a scrambled media landscape. On a weekly basis since April 2020, we’ve covered the key stories emerging at the busy intersection between politics, business and the media.

But with the pandemic no longer leading the news bulletins, it’s time for us to retire Under The Radar. It had a great run.

Instead, we will be bringing something new and more relevant to today’s media environment to your inboxes.

Trafalgar Strategy is launching a brand new newsletter: The Rebuttal. In it, we will spotlight how politicians, public figures, brands and businesses are using language and different media channels to communicate their way through crises.

You may be wondering, why?

We are living in an unprecedented time. Your conduct and your choice of words has never been under greater scrutiny. This is powered by digital platforms that accelerate the speed at which crisis spreads. In the current environment, it’s never been more important for individuals and businesses to understand the do’s and don’ts of crisis communications.

At Trafalgar Strategy, we help clients navigate this environment every day. We are excited to showcase our expertise and give you a peek behind the curtain, so please do keep careful look out for the inaugural edition of The Rebuttal, coming to your inboxes soon.

For now, please enjoy the final edition of Under The Radar.

This week we discuss:

  1. Don’t look up

  2. Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream

  3. Another dodgy government contract

Don’t look up

What happened?

Chile has announced a plan to ration water in the rivers that supply its capital, Santiago, as the nation-wide drought enters its thirteenth year. What does it mean? Chile is on the frontline of the global climate catastrophe. Unlike most countries, they have elected a government that takes it seriously. The short-term plan to manage the crisis is a four-tier alert system that begins with public service announcements, moves on to restricting water pressure, and concludes with rotating water cuts of up to 24 hours. The country’s water availability has dropped by 10 per cent to 37 per cent over the last 30 years, and there are concerns it could drop a further 50 per cent in northern and central parts of the country by 2060. Just last month, the Peñuelas Lake, the supplier of drinking water for nearly two million people, officially dried up. This will no doubt lead to huge flows of migration – something which Western leaders still do not seem to understand as they fail to get to grips with governing in the era of climate catastrophe. The Chilean government, however, is committed to tackling the impact of climate change head on. The newly elected Socialist president Gabriel Boric – who appropriately resembles Leonardo Di Caprio’s character in Adam McKay’s “Don’t Look Up”, an apocalyptic allegory for the climate catastrophe – has assembled a progressive cabinet and a formidable green agenda, including plans to bring forward a ban on the installation of new coal-fired power plants from 2040 to 2025. However impressive, Chile cannot act alone. Perhaps the most difficult task for Boric’s new government is to convince other regional players, including Brazil’s notorious far-right Jair Bolsonaro, to realise the solar and wind potential in South America’s vast open landscapes and stretching coastlines.

Turn off your mind, relax and float downstream

What happened? The psychedelic compound in magic mushrooms, Psilocybin, has been found to help patients struggling with depression, researchers at the Imperial Centre for Psychedelic Research said. Psilocybin is thought to produce a sort of ‘opening up effect’, helping those with psychiatric disorders escape negative thinking patterns.

What does it mean? The findings published in Nature Medicine are an important step forward in treating mental illnesses like depression, providing a promising alternative approach to traditional treatments. Psilocybin is one of many psychoactive components being tested across several studies, examining their effects compared to conventional antidepressants like escitalopram. In the recent study, some patients took synthetic psilocybin, while others took escitalopram. The former induced changes in brain connectivity that were not similarly discovered in the brains of those using antidepressants. This alteration in brain connectivity is what scientists are referring to as ‘flexibility’. According to the latest findings, not only does psilocybin make the brain act more ‘flexibly’ compared to escitalopram, but its effects also last much longer. However, as Professor Robin Carhart-Harris, a senior study author said, despite the encouraging results researchers are not sure why or how the therapy worked. He added that there needs to be more research on how long this ‘rewiring’ effect lasts, which would help us understand more of how mental illness and treatments affect the brain. As the mental health crisis shows no sign of abating, and governments around the world fail to adequately tackle it, this breakthrough should be welcomed. However, whatever you do, don’t attempt to self-medicate – you may find yourself on a trip not worth taking.

Another dodgy government contract

What happened? The Government has handed a new £500 million contract to Fujitsu, the computer firm at the heart of the Post Office scandal. What does it mean? In one of the most public and drawn-out scandals in recent history, faulty software used for accounting at Post Offices led to hundreds of sub-postmasters being accused of stealing from the department. The accusations led to wrongful criminal convictions that destroyed lives, forced people out of their homes, and even led to suicides. Computer firm Fujitsu, worth £58bn, was responsible for the faulty software called Horizon – yet they have largely dodged public accountability for the scandal. Despite its track record and central role in this shocking miscarriage of justice, Fujitsu continues to bag lucrative government contracts. Most recently, they have been handed a new £500 million contract for IT services similar to those of Horizon. Public records show that the IT firm has been raking in taxpayer money – including a £44m contract with the Foreign Office, a £6.1m deal for the upcoming Commonwealth Games, and a £665,000 contract with DCMS. Despite the claims of the government’s spokesperson, Baroness Bloomfield, that Fujitsu is no longer a “preferred supplier to the Government”, the company has been awarded contracts worth over £3 billion since 2013. The company still being in receipt of taxpayer funds whilst victims have struggled in their fight for justice has, quite rightly, sparked fury across the political spectrum. In a period of famously ‘dodgy’ government contracts, ranging from Track & Trace consultants to VIP PPE lanes, this might just be the most despicable and ill-thought out.

This Week’s Must Reads

  1. “The Chinese companies trying to buy strategic islands” by Kathrin Hille for The Financial Times

  2. “The United Nations has the power to punish Putin. This is how it can be done” by Simon Tisdall for The Guardian

  3. “The evolution of Marine Le Pen” by Andrew Hussey for The New Statesman

  4. “What Boris Johnson must do if he is ever to recover from Partygate” by David Frost for The Telegraph

Chart of the Week

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  • Apr 14, 2022
  • 4 min read

In this week’s Digital Digest we take a look at Apple’s employee spying claims and a police force’s program to offer GPS trackers to people with dementia.

We then take a look at big tech as competition between video game giants hots up and Elon Musk’s Twitter dealings stoke controversy

Closer To Home

Apple whistleblower brings spying claims to UK

Former Apple employee Ashley Gjøvik has filed a privacy complaint against the iPhone maker alleging that the tech giant invaded employee privacy and engaged in unlawful data collection over ‘years and multiple countries’.

Ms Gjøvik claimed the company uses an app on employees’ iPhones that takes pictures and videos automatically whenever it registers a face on its camera. Apple also allegedly pressured employees to engage in other invasive data collection procedures, including scans of ears and ear canals.

The claim comes after Gjøvik was fired by Apple in September for violating the company’s rules on leaking confidential information. Gjøvik has previously claimed she experienced bullying and harassment from both colleagues and management and says she began raising concerns internally about workplace safety last March.

Police offer GPS trackers to people with dementia

Police forces are offering GPS devices to people with dementia who are at high risk of going missing. Avon and Somerset police are offering 30 devices,  created by local company MindMe, to those they consider most vulnerable as part of the force’s dementia safeguarding scheme. The technology was previously adopted by Sussex police in 2013. 

Should this technology prove to be effective it could be a massive addition to care provisions as 70% of dementia sufferers are deemed to be at risk of going missing at least once, according to research from the University of East Anglia. Sergeant Stuart King, who runs the scheme, stressed that MindMe’s devices are ‘not a substitute for good care’ in preventative and responsive measures for missing persons but the technology can make a ‘crucial difference’.

Big Tech

Big tech bids for video game developers as industry races to build subscription platforms

Microsoft and Sony, as well as Apple, Amazon and Netflix, are  racing to build and develop their own versions of a subscription-based video game library and platform

The race has sparked an acquisition spree, which saw Microsoft buy smaller video game companies like Call of Duty and Warcraft publisher Activision Blizzard. Independent developers have also welcomed the cash injection as it allows them to work on ideas that may not be commercially successful or may not appeal to mass audiences. 

Experts hope this new direction will usher in a more diverse era in the industry where smaller, indie developers can thrive and help move the genre forward without the commercial burden of having to make a globally successful game.

Elon Musk steps back from position on Twitter board despite becoming biggest individual shareholder

It was recently announced that Tesla CEO Elon Musk became Twitter’s largest individual shareholder owning a 9.2% stake in the company. 

His appointment was set to be made official on April 9th, however, on the same morning he decided not to take up the position. This was likely a strategic move on Musk’s behalf as being on the board would have meant that he would have had to agree not to buy more than 14.9% of Twitter’s stock. This restriction no longer applies, which could potentially clear the way for a takeover should Musk decide to do so.

And, in the latest turn of events, Musk is being sued by another Twitter shareholder for failing to disclose he had bought a stake in the company. US law requires that investors notify the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) within 10 days if they acquire a stake bigger than 5% in a company. 

If his first two weeks are anything to go by, it seems likely that Musk’s time at Twitter will be turbulent. A prolific tweeter himself, he has been vocal about his vision for the platform. 

Also In The News

  1. Fortnite Developer Epic Games has secured $2bn in funding from Sony and the investment company behind the Lego Group to build a gaming metaverse. See here.

  2. Tim Cook has said a world without privacy is ‘less innovative’ and ‘less human’ in an attack on social media and search engines. See here.

  3. Netflix subscribers in Russia have launched a class action lawsuit over loss of service following the streaming service’s decision to stop streaming in the country. See here. 

  4. Amazon faces a potential wave of US workers joining trade unions following the successful vote to unionise by workers at the JFK8 site in New York. See here.

  5. Ukraine has accused Sandworm group, a Russian spy agency, of planting a malware ‘bomb’ in order to shut down part of the country’s electricity grid. See here.

Worth A Read

  1. Wired: Europe Is Building a Huge International Facial Recognition System

  2. Daily Telegraph: Why the Japanese company behind the Post Office scandal keeps getting taxpayer cash

  3. Financial Times: Football clubs are influencers and need to cut their crypto ties

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