............ and above we have an example of a person needing to control the conversation by subtle introductions into the original topic.
............ and above we have an example of a person needing - when finding themselves unable to kick the ball - to kick the player instead.
I've been clear - some might say 'forthright' - in making my point throughout the thread. To be accused of "subtle introductions" now is amusing.

But again, politicians are entitled to a private life, and judging them on the basis of rumour and gossip about their private life choices is wrong. Hancock's failure wasn't in his relationships, it was in breaching the guidelines his own department issued.
If we want politicians who are representatives of 'us', then we need them to be like 'us'. And that means having politicians with faults..... because none of 'us' are perfect. As I pointed out in my preceding post (the one you have objected to), it is rare to find anyone (politicians included) who haven't broken some of the 'rules'.