One of those not very much Sundays, when the press is all taken up with one not very significant story.
This morning it's the news that the Queen - celebrating her platinum jubilee as we speak - has requested that Prince Charles' wife Camilla be known as Queen Camilla on her son's accession to the throne as king.
I used to be a royalist as a young person, following in the tradition of my family I guess. Then I became anti monarchy for a while- but never very strongly so, and now I'm pretty indifferent to the whole thing. I think it is better than having a presidency - all of the bullshit around election of one, and the corruption that creeps in. And who would it be? David Attenborough? Nigel Farage? No - screw that idea! No, we're better off sticking with what we've got. They are a good tourist draw, of no constitutional significance and it would take years of worthless effort in order to legislate them out of the system. It simply isn't worth the effort. In the meantime up until the point where they fizzle away due to simple attrition and lack of interest, best thing they can do is to keep their heads down, keep quiet and not draw too much unwarranted attention to themselves. They are a diversion, a soap opera for the masses but of no importance in the long run
On the political front, things have gone quiet. The PM's wife Carrie is taking some flak as a result of this new book about her, and MP Nadine Dorries (an unlikely champion for the PM's cause - and about as useful as a supportive intervention from Tony Blair always is in any cause) has jumped to her defence saying that the press hounding of her is obnoxious and sinister. Funny Nadine, you didn't have a problem with the hounding of Jeremy Corbyn did you? Dorries has claimed that the book is a tissue of fabrications, many provided by Johnson's arch-nemesis Dominic Cummings, who has also recently revealed that the PM likes to think of himself like a Roman emperor, imagining himself cast in statue form at the entrances of all of the building projects he will initiate. Consequently he spends much time pouring over maps (apparently) looking for locations on which he could propose the development of great civic projects that could bear his name going down through history. Didn't Adolph Hitler have similar visions of grandeur if I recall correctly?
But back in the real world, the PM is clinging on by his finger-tips. Some estimates of the number of letters of no confidence that have been submitted are as high as 50 (54 being the magic number), but it is unlikely to be that high. But certainly up in the thirties and possibly around forty would seem a reasonable estimate. It would not take much more, however, to push the figure higher, such is the level of indecision in the backbenchers as to whether to stick with Johnson (in respect of the achievements that he can cite, and the possibility that he could restore his fortunes and turn things around) or ditch him as a lost cause that can only do their re-election chances harm. Privately - and not so privately - the opinion seems to be shifting toward the latter.
Anyway - let's see what the Sunday morning political slots bring - they can always be relied upon to throw up some interesting shifts. Used by the Government to get its message out in the main, it doesn't always go according to plan and occasionally a real clanger can be dropped.
Here's hoping!
Edit:
Just come away from watching Trevor Phillips on Sunday and alongside the usual Government/Opposition spokespeople he also interviewed ex Spad and top Theresa May advisor Gavin Barwell on what he made of the situation inside Number 10.
Barwell made the observation that it didn't really matter on the quality of the advice that Johnson was recieving if he simply wasn't going to listen to it. As an example he cited the recent Jimmy Saville comments that Johnson made across the floor of the House, comments that have not aided the PM's cause, but have made it considerably worse. Johnson, said Barwell, was told by his advisors not to make the comments - but went ahead and did so anyway. Against this backdrop, Barwell said, it mattered nothing how good the advice he received was.
Phillips asked if he, Barwell, was in agreement with the sixty plus percent of people who thought Johnson should resign - and it was here that for me the interview became significant. Barwell is a highly respected Tory figure - not an MP, but a man closely linked to the top advisors of the Party, and someone who's words carry weight.
He said that on a moral level it was difficult to support the PM, knowing what had been going on and, choose whatever spin the PM tried to put on it that it was simply wrong. On a Party basis, he said that it was difficult to see how Boris Johnson could turn things around and regain the upper hand, to become once more the driver of events rather than the victim of them. Lastly, from the country's point of view, given the damage to our international reputation that the scandal was causing, again it was difficult to find the space in which to throw in behind the PM.
So in total, given all the above, he thought it better that the PM should go, but (and here is the crux, so my italics)
there was no way that the PM would go of his own accord and so it would be up to the Tory backbenchers to remove him.
Now this is the whole reason that he was there in front of the cameras giving this interview.
His message was not to the viewing public as a disinterested observer - it was to the wavering Tory MPs who I mention above - to nudge them into sending in those letters.
I don't know who was behind it, who had cooked up the plan, but this is what was going on. It could have been in conjunction with Cummings (difficult to see but not impossible - the previous enemies are now united in their antipathy towards Johnson) - perhaps even Michael (Blackadder) Gove had his thin white fingers in the pot - but this was what was going on.
Will it be enough to tip the balance - it remains to be seen. But one observation. He said that Johnson will never go of his own accord. Maybe not, but one snippet from the morning press was that Carrie is by all accounts, begining to feel the heat. The report suggested that behind the scenes, she may actually be trying to convince her husband that the game is up. And if the recent book is anything to go by, it might be that her advice is the only advice that he might be prepared to give half an ear to.