WBS seizes control of UK during PM handover
Little is know about what is discussed behind the closed doors of Buckingham palace.
![WBS seizes control of UK during PM handover](/_hoard/99999x490.fit_.DVi8tLjC_Z11BLpu.webp)
Yet, early this afternoon, words to the effect of “sorry Liz, I give up on this damn debacle” were exchanged, leaving David Cameron without the premiership, and Britain without a PM.
With Theresa May lined up to visit the self-same palace later on to pick up the vacant role, the WBS board of automatons had to act quickly to ensure a successful takeover of the country whilst it was technically in a state of anarchy.
“We saw that the UK was effectively without a CEO”, announced chief of exploitation, Slazzio de Slimio, “hence, given the hit this will necessarily cause to the value of UK derivatives, assets will, in a short while, outvalue the cumulative stock prices”. Pressed to explain why this was grounds for a hostile takeover, he added, “it’s simple, all we need to do now, is strip the UK of all of its marketable assets, and we’ll be sitting on a healthy profit”.
How did WBS manage to squeeze into the top spot? Director of CVs, Francois de Aristocraie, proclaimed that “as with anything in corporate law, it’s simply a game of who can throw the most money at corporate lawyers. Given that the Conservative party has recently blown most of its cash on an election, a little bit more on the referendum, and the final odds and sods on Eric Pickles’s gastric band, it was really quite an easy contest – we even have the rights to William Hague’s stammer, and Sajid Javid’s first born son”.
What can we expect from a WBS lead government? An end to inefficiencies such as green spaces, public services, and solidarity. However, their work won’t only be deconstructive. We can also expect a neat rise in useless jargon about “financial ecosystems”, outsourcing to areas that haven’t got a pesky history of opposition to slavery, investment in tasteless mock-ups of artistic movements their owners know nothing about, and over-priced poor quality champagne.