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Allison Pearson: The public is wiser than the net zero hysterics

September 22, 2023

By Paul Homewood

 

The broadcast media’s absurd overreaction to the PM’s plans shows the gulf between voters and elite


Poor Justin Rowlatt! Spare a thought for the BBC’s climate editor. He appeared to be having conniptions on News at Ten and that was before the Prime Minister confirmed the rumour that the Government would be rowing back on some of its net zero targets. Justin was nowhere to be seen on Wednesday’s programme after Rishi Sunak had fleshed out the new plan, saying he would delay the ban on new petrol and diesel car sales from 2030 to 2035 and not coerce people into buying one of those unloved heat pumps.


Where was Justin? Had he, like Krook in Bleak House, self-combusted on hearing of this heretical act against the green religion of which he is a high priest? Was he now, indeed, a heap of smouldering ash under the desk at Sophie Raworth’s feet? Perhaps the climate editor has legged it to Mount Ararat where he can gather in the animals two by two, preparing for the Biblical flood that will result from permitting Britons to hang onto their oil and gas boilers until 2035.


In his Tuesday report, Rowlatt seemed to be seething with anger, so entirely lacking in perspective (he failed to mention that pushing back the electric-vehicle target five years merely brings the UK into line with the EU) that I scribbled “Ofcom?” on my pad. Forget the balanced reporting the regulator requires of broadcasters, the climate editor of the publicly-funded BBC is allowed to carry on like a poundshop Nostradamus, furiously brandishing his “The End is Nigh” placard to terrorise viewers.


Over our dismal summer, Rowlatt flew off in search of “heat storms” and “wildfires” which he claimed were directly caused by climate change while the local Spanish arsonist smirked just off-camera with his box of X-long matches and can of petrol. Sorry, but Rowlatt is an activist not a journalist.
That is the kind of blind intransigence Sunak is up against as he dares to challenge the wishful-thinking of the EV evangelists, an establishment chock full of eco-zealots who have never had to put a price on their fantasies. In the boldest speech of his premiership, the PM pointed out, quite reasonably, that the plans to meet net zero will only succeed “if public support is maintained or we risk losing the agenda altogether”.
The man in the street has been way ahead of politicians and the media, refusing to adopt costly or plain stupid measures that don’t make any sense unless you are a member of the powerful Climate Change Committee or have your sticky fingers in a few renewables pies.
Look at Wales. I was supposed to be driving there today to see my mother and sister, but with a reduction in the speed limit from 30mph to 20mph in many areas, my estimated arrival time in Tenby is March 2025. A petition opposing dopey Druid Drakeford’s nonsensical net zero initiative has already attracted over 340,000 signatures – around 22 per cent of the total number of people who voted in Wales in the last general election. A much-mocked video shows Lee Waters, the Labour Senedd member responsible, explaining how an “economic climate catastrophe” will be averted by making Welsh motorists slower than your average dog-walker. His scientific ignorance is sadly ubiquitous.


On ITV, not hiding his displeasure at the PM’s reforms, political editor Robert Peston casually linked global warming with extreme temperatures, proving he doesn’t know the difference between weather and climate.
And with what glee did all mainstream channels report the business backlash against Sunak’s welcome pragmatism. They highlighted critical comments made by the Ford motor company, but somehow failed to mention statements by Toyota and Jaguar Land Rover who said they were actually in favour of a delay. Channel 4 News blew a gasket, of course. The tone of its almost comically partisan coverage was easily gauged from a backdrop that bellowed: Emergency on Planet Earth.
Guests who supported Sunak’s plans on all the channels were few and far between, and when someone was briefly allowed to challenge the green groupthink they were subjected to a much tougher grilling. On Radio 4, Ed Miliband was allowed to get away with saying the delay will “add billions in cost to families”. How? Even if that were true (it so isn’t), it’s a case of billions schmillions compared to the trillions net zero will actually cost the ordinary men and women of this country.


Labour’s shadow climate change alarmist, Ed is so deluded he claims unreliable renewables will provide enough energy “because the wind is always blowing somewhere”. Well, I am reliably informed by a Cambridge professor that the UK could need an impossible number of wind turbines even to begin to provide enough power for all those EVs no one wants to buy. But don’t worry, Ed! Your windmills can carpet over this blessed isle and the 65 million humans can move to the Outer Hebrides. I’m sure it’ll be fine if we all budge up.
As for Boris Johnson lashing out at his successor’s shrewd rethink – Britain “cannot afford to falter now or in any way lose our ambition for this country” – do bear in mind it was dear Boris who made up that unattainable 2030 EV target on the fly to show off to his mates at COP26. Details, details! The fact is we have all been lied to on an unimaginable scale about net zero and its likely cost and consequences. “But we are miles ahead of any other country,” wailed one of the outraged eco-zealots yesterday. Funny that no other country wants to join the UK in a race to impoverish itself, isn’t it? What Kemi Badenoch witheringly called “unilateral economic disarmament”. Would we had more of Kemi’s steely kind. “But net zero will create thousands of high-quality green jobs”, say the zealots. “Yes, in China,’ quipped a Telegraph reader under my column. Spot on, Sir! Don’t let the b——- take you in.


What the past 24 hours of toddler tantrums from Westminster, business and the media (poor Justin Rowlatt crooning green mantras to himself in a darkened room!) have revealed is how much wiser is the common man than the supposed elite. A YouGov poll found that some 44 per cent of the public support delaying or dropping some of our net zero commitments against 38 per cent who say the Government should stick with its current climate change plans. See how woefully disconnected our leaders are from actual public opinion. They need to get out more, although not to Wales where the fastest form of transport is currently the pit pony.


Personally, I think the Climate Change Act should be repealed, and Britons freed from its crazy, punitive legal targets. But that’s for another time. Rishi Sunak has made an excellent start. Carry on, Prime Minister. We’re right behind you.

https://netzerowatch.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=c920274f2a364603849bbb505&id=05acc5baf6&e=4961da7cb1

29 Comments
  1. pom52 permalink
    September 22, 2023 4:02 pm

    Its time we started re-opening the pits that Maggie closed. We are the only coal nation in the world that doesn’t produce coal.

    • September 22, 2023 4:55 pm

      That’s an urban myth. Maggie didn’t close that many. The previous Labour governments closed far more pits than she did.

    • catweazle666 permalink
      September 23, 2023 11:13 pm

      Maggie never closed a single pit, the National Coal board did.

      • 186no permalink
        September 24, 2023 9:54 am

        And if memory serves, more pits were shut whilst a Labour government rules than not…

    • September 26, 2023 12:36 am

      I’m not sure how much easily mined and therefore cheap coal there is left in the UK. Since various idiots have posed for virtue signalling pictures while most of our coal fired power stations have been blown up there doesn’t seem much point in mining loads of coal we can’t use. Fracking, on the other hand, makes far more sense to me.

  2. September 22, 2023 4:24 pm

    Justin Rowlatt is an ignorant, unqualified BBC reporter – hence as a serial liar he is ideal for the job.

  3. 186no permalink
    September 22, 2023 5:01 pm

    May I point out that Sunak is a fully paid up member of the Globalist elite aka WEF – and may I also point out that any discussion of Net Zero that references acceptance of the need to reign back etc etc is a de facto acceptance that CO2 is a key driver of a warming planet advancing out of a period of post ice age cooling. What utter blxs.

    I struggle to be “right behind” Sunak given amongst a host of other mistakes his shenanigans during the immediate pre and post Brexit vote. He has, may I remind folks, NOT retreated from “delivering” Nut Zero – a pointless, gaslighting exercise in political capitulation to the Ultra Far Left Woke Blob who are determined to decimate the world we inhabit for their own malign ends and screw all the other “useless eaters”

    I am reading Shelby Foote’s magnum opus narrative of the American Civil War; there are many many similarities from that conflict to what is happening in the UK ( and elsewhere ) in 2023; I firmly believe this uttered by Abraham Lincoln is entirely true today; “America ( substitute the UK ) will not be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedom, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.”

    There are hundred’s of other quotes from all shades of the Civil War that could apply today. Sunak’s so called retreat is nothing of the sort – he has just allowed the WHO to run the UK’s health policy, introduced the most draconian anti free speech law which is going to criminalise vast swathes of the UK and signed off the Energy Bill – need I say more?

  4. Harry Passfield permalink
    September 22, 2023 7:11 pm

    There are some hardliners activists giving sceptics he’ll in the comments. I guess she touched a nerve.

    • Micky R permalink
      September 23, 2023 8:55 am

      ” There are some hardliners activists giving sceptics he’ll in the comments. ”

      The believers are responding with an almost religious zealotry

  5. Thomas Carr permalink
    September 22, 2023 8:39 pm

    It is not so much the baiting of the Greens and the catastrophists that makes Pearson entertaining if sloppy but the possibility that an assumed Labour victory will be snatched away by the electorates’ growing awareness of what the left of all colours are really up to –intentionally and obsessively.
    Sunak is turning the ship round. It remains to be seen how far he will get in the other direction. Kemi B has it to a tee.

    • Jordan permalink
      September 22, 2023 11:55 pm

      “Sunak is turning the ship round.”
      Maybe, but let’s hope the ship is a massive super tanker full of delusions of grandeur and virtue.
      The Tories are responsible for the NZ Statutory Instrument – they had the parliamentary majority, but did not vote it down.
      The Tories are responsible for the ban on coal-fired power generation – they had the parliamentary majority and did not vote it down.
      The Tories are responsible for the Energy Bill presently going through Parliament, including some pretty draconian impositions on the freedoms of the electorate – it doesn’t exactly look like they are going to vote it down.

  6. Realist permalink
    September 22, 2023 9:44 pm

    notify comments

    • Thomas Carr permalink
      September 23, 2023 4:43 pm

      To whom?

  7. Ray Sanders permalink
    September 22, 2023 10:30 pm

    Is it just me or is there a striking resemblance between Lowratt and RolandRat?

    • devonblueboy permalink
      September 23, 2023 6:54 am

      , 🤣🤣

  8. W Flood permalink
    September 23, 2023 9:15 am

    You wait, every wet day, every warmish/coldish day will be blamed on Sunak.

  9. Philip Mulholland permalink
    September 23, 2023 9:22 am

    Look at Wales. I was supposed to be driving there today to see my mother and sister, but with a reduction in the speed limit from 30mph to 20mph in many areas, my estimated arrival time in Tenby is March 2025

    Watching the petition counter click up in real time is quite something to see.
    We want the Welsh Government to rescind and remove the disastrous 20mph law

    The 2023 official estimate for the population size of Wales is 3,105,000
    At the time of this post with 374,166 signatures exclusive to Wales over 12% of population have voted.

    • gezza1298 permalink
      September 23, 2023 10:27 am

      The number of signatures is a higher proportion of the registered electors, which is probably more important.

      • Philip Mulholland permalink
        September 23, 2023 11:23 am

        @gezza1298
        I know, but either way you look at this the numbers are stunning.
        Look at the % by constituents for Deeside.
        Welsh Labour have lost y gogledd.

  10. liardetg permalink
    September 23, 2023 9:57 am

    Rowlatt continues the noble tradition set by Harrabin and his Conspiracy with Shukman tagging along. I still remember Shukman when Trump wisely ditched Paris; flooded Miami, drowned Pacific islands, little Maldivian appeared wanting climate money from the American taxpayer ( to build sirports). Tragic consequences taking immediate effect.

  11. gezza1298 permalink
    September 23, 2023 10:30 am

    For the public – Guardian readers excluded – to be wiser than the Net Zero religious zealots is not setting the bar very high.

  12. Colin Hawthorne permalink
    September 23, 2023 10:57 am

    Don’t give Sunak too much credit here – my take is that following the recent Uxbridge and South Ruislip by-election Sunak’s team have realised the only chance they have to make a fight of the General Election is to push back on the ‘green crap’ (copyright call-me-Dave). Assuming a Tory win watch how quickly the bans are reintroduced and a quickening of the net zero disease ensues. This is ‘authorised opposition’ not, unfortunately, a new dawn.

    • 186no permalink
      September 23, 2023 12:52 pm

      I agree 100%; WEF leopards do not change their ideological spots easily – if at all.

  13. justgivemeall permalink
    September 23, 2023 7:18 pm

    No the public are not wiser.

  14. liardetg permalink
    September 24, 2023 10:01 am

    I have a belief that Sunak’s recent blob of common sense is just the start of a total unravelment. Let’s have some science on the question of whether CO2 affects the weather.

  15. John Hultquist permalink
    September 24, 2023 4:56 pm

    The paragraph beginning: “Where was Justin?” . . .

    . . . is a literary masterpiece.

Comments are closed.