Music and entertainment world reacts to Nadine Dorries becoming culture secretary

The music and entertainment world has been reacting to Nadine Dorries becoming the UK’s new culture secretary.

As part of Boris Johnson‘s significant cabinet reshuffle yesterday (September 15), Dorries has taken on the job as head of the Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), replacing Oliver Dowden.

Following Dorries’ appointment, many across the music and culture industry have been sharing previous opinions and comments from the new chief, including when she claimed that comedy was being killed by “left-wing snowflakes” and that the BBC was “a biased left-wing organisation which is seriously failing in its political representation, from the top down”.

Advertisement

One tweet, from 2017, has been widely shared since yesterday’s appointment. In it, Dorries wrote: “Left-wing snowflakes are killing comedy, tearing down historic statues, removing books from universities, dumbing down panto, removing Christ from Christmas and suppressing free speech. Sadly, it must be true, history does repeat itself. It will be music next.”

“Our new culture secretary…” Tim Burgess wrote when sharing the tweet, while David Baddiel referenced Dorries’ historical stance on gay marriage.

“Not sure this view is going to recommend Nadine Dorries to many people who work in the creative arts,” he tweeted.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, former Green Party leader Caroline Lucas wrote: “Nadine Dorries as culture secretary? Satire is dead.”

See a range of reactions to the controversial appointment below.

Elsewhere at Downing Street Boris Johnson this week laid out his winter COVID plan, including a potential ‘plan B’ for vaccine passports at large events.

The Prime Minister revealed the plans in a press conference held at Downing Street on Tuesday (September 14). In the speech, he said that while the government and its scientific advisers are “confident in the vaccines that have made such a difference to our lives,” they did not rule out new measures coming into place in the event of “unsustainable pressure” being put on the NHS.






These potential measures include mask wearing becoming mandatory once again, staff being asked to work from home and vaccine passport certificates being required for events with over 500 people in attendance.