In what appeared to be a mistake at first glance, the Daily Mirror monopolized for a few moments All eyes are on the UK. Last Saturday, the said outlet published a story about the country’s Finance Minister, Kwasi Kwarting, which appeared with the headline “Kwasi Kwarting said he had to do something different with a small budget” (“Kwasi Kwarting said he would do something different with small businesses on budgets”).
The startling thing about the news itself was not the headline news, in the midst of an economic crisis after the pound fell to its worst level since 1971 and the Bank of England raised interest rates. Curiosity was in the photo, since at first glance it can look like the Minister of Finance himself. However, the newspaper has been confused and placed Another man with the same clothes and the same skin colorBut this wasn’t a Quasi-Quarting.
The Minister himself wanted to respond to the news, debunking the post with the wrong image and the message “It’s not me… the Daily Mirror” (“That’s not me, Daily Mirror”). Confusion unleashed all kinds of jokes on social networks, and the tweet of the Finance Minister got nearly 50 thousand “likes”. In this type of situation, humor prevails, and this helps to better deal with these innocent confusions.
There is no Conservative party at the polls
Just a month after Liz Truss began her term as prime minister, polls indicate that the Conservatives would be at historic lows if a general election were held now. Labor benefits from conservative drainAnd his leader, Keir Starmer, is the front-runner in the upcoming election, where, according to opinion polls, his party can achieve the absolute majority that Liz Truss and her people now have.
Right now, Truss and his team have a year and a half left to alter the polls. The protagonist of the Daily Mirror’s tale, Kwasi Quarting, has established himself as one of Gears’ strongest men, but has been greatly weakened by the drop in sterling to its lowest level since 1971 after the tax cut announced by the Prime Minister, And where he was directly involvedMinister of Finance.
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