Eight days before attending the grandiose demonstrations which greet, from June 2 to 5, the platinum jubilee of the Queen of England, Boris Johnson inaugurates an underground express metro line which crosses London from east to west.
Its construction, launched in 2009 by a Labor Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, was completed under the third Conservative government since then.
Naturally, Johnson calls it the "Elizabeth line."
He takes advantage of this inauguration to draw up a brief assessment of his employment policy.
A campaign he called "Way to Work" and which he notes that since its launch, it has already created 283,300 jobs, with a view to reaching 500,000 by the end of this month .
“The official employment figures,
he welcomes,
show that unemployment has fallen to its lowest level, 3.7%, for half a century.”
Hence he concludes that
“the nation fires all the pistons as it emerges from the pandemic”…
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