A Post-COVID Power Grab
COVID-19’s chaos—isolation, meaningless jobs, anxiety—fueled what Mattias Desmet calls mass formation, a collective hypnosis where people cling to narratives for solidarity.[1] Narcissistic gatekeepers like Rachel Reeves, Matt Hancock, and Angela Rayner, trained in control-heavy roles, exploited this vacuum to rise, pushing out Gen-X workers (50–64) via toxic workplaces mislabeled as “mental health exits.” While workers—like me, fighting a constructive dismissal battle—face the boot, elites dodge accountability for lies and misconduct, shielded by networks. Rayner’s fresh resignation (Sep 5, 2025) over a tax scandal proves the double standard. The data backs this pattern—let’s expose it.[2][3][4]
Rachel Reeves: From Complaints to Chancellor
UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves claimed “economist” at HBOS (2006–2009), but ran a complaints team, mastering gatekeeping by saying “no.” She exaggerated her Bank of England tenure as “a decade” (really 5.5 years), blaming “staff errors” when caught. A 2009 whistleblower alleged she misused funds, yet she’s untouchable, backed by Starmer amid a £50 billion fiscal hole.[5] X users call her a “liar”; the system calls her “essential.”[6] Studies show grandiose narcissists exaggerate achievements, shielded by elites.[7]
Matt Hancock: The Troubled Health Secretary
Matt Hancock’s career screams narcissistic ambition. Born 1978, he studied PPE at Oxford (1998) and earned an MPhil at Cambridge (2002).[8] He worked at the Bank of England (2000–2005, housing focus), then as George Osborne’s adviser (2005–2010).[9] Elected MP for West Suffolk (2010–2024), he served as Minister for Skills (2012–2015), Anti-Corruption Champion (2014–2015), and Paymaster General (2015–2016).[10] As Digital Secretary (2018), his data-grabbing app was slammed by Big Brother Watch.[11] Health Secretary (2018–2021) during COVID, he pushed lockdowns and vaccines but resigned after breaking his own rules with an affair, deflecting blame to leaks.[12] He landed a UN role (2021) and I’m a Celebrity (2022, third place), called “slimy” by peers, yet faced no real consequences.[13]
Angela Rayner: From Union Rep to Resignation
Angela Rayner, born 1980 in Stockport, grew up on a council estate and became a teenage mum at 16.[14] A care worker and Unison rep (1996–2015), she became MP for Ashton-under-Lyne (2015–present), the first woman to hold the seat.[15] She held Shadow Cabinet roles under Jeremy Corbyn (2016–2020, Education) and Keir Starmer (2020–2024), backing Corbyn in 2016.[16] Elected Deputy Labour Leader (2020), she became Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary (Jul 2024–Sep 2025).[17] On Sep 5, 2025, she resigned both roles and her deputy leadership after underpaying £40,000 in stamp duty on a Hove flat, breaching the ministerial code.[4] Rayner claimed “mistaken” legal advice, but her conveyancer denied giving tax advice, and ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus, while praising her “integrity,” faulted her for not seeking expert tax counsel.[18] Starmer called her a “major figure” in Labour, softening her exit, unlike workers sacked for less.[6]
Germany’s Echo: Plagiarism and Protection
German ministers like Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg (2011) and Franziska Giffey (2021) resigned over plagiarized PhDs, exposed by VroniPlag Wiki, but Giffey became Berlin’s mayor, and Ursula von der Leyen skated to EU presidency.[19] Like Reeves, Hancock, and Rayner, they inflate credentials, shielded by networks. Desmet’s mass formation fits: they exploit anxiety (COVID, economic fears) to push “heroic” narratives while dodging accountability.[1]
The Data: Gen-X Purged
UK data shows 2.2 million 50–64-year-olds left work by 2022, with 19% citing stress/mental health (up 12% pre-COVID).[8] A 2023 CIPD report notes 43% of workers face poor mental health from toxic management, with 50–59-year-olds hit hardest (25% burnout).[20] Hancock’s lockdowns and Rayner’s housing policies amplified economic stress, contributing to exits.[12][15] Germany sees similar trends.[21] Narcissistic leaders drive 30% higher employee anxiety, pushing Gen-X out while labeling it “mental health” to dodge liability.[22] My dismissal fight reflects this—HR gatekeepers gaslighting, protecting their own.
Double Standards: Elites vs. Us
If I lied on my CV or dodged £40,000 in tax, I’d be fired—80% of UK firms sack for resume fraud.[7] Reeves, Hancock, and Rayner? They’re shielded. Reeves keeps her job, Hancock got TV fame, and Rayner, despite resigning, remains an MP with Starmer’s praise.[5][13][6] German ministers keep careers post-plagiarism. Desmet warns of “dull bureaucrats” leading mass formation, shielded by groupthink.[1] COVID’s chaos—retirements (37%), mental health exits (19%)—opened vacancies for narcissists, while 35% of over-50s feel undervalued.[23] X posts rage against “malignant narcissists” like Hancock and Rayner’s “hypocrisy.”[24][4]
Fighting Back Against Denial
Narcissists like Reeves, Hancock, Rayner, and HR will deflect—Reeves blames “staff errors,” Hancock blames leaks, Rayner blames lawyers.[5][12][18] Desmet’s mass formation explains why: group hypnosis blinds elites to logic, dismissing evidence as “conspiracy.”[1] But data—19% mental health exits, 80% CV fraud firings, 30% higher anxiety—makes denial shaky.[8][7][22] Fight back:
- Document Toxicity: Log HR bullying. ACAS supports constructive dismissal claims for “breach of trust.”[25]
- Expose Hypocrisy: Call out double standards—Rayner’s £40,000 tax dodge vs. workers’ firings.
- Link Stress to Work: Get a doctor’s note tying mental health to workplace conditions.
- Spread the Word: Share this on X, blogs, or zines. Break Desmet’s hypnosis—silence is their shield.[1]
The old guard’s being purged, but we’re not done. Let’s dismantle their narrative.
References
- Desmet, M. (2022). The Psychology of Totalitarianism. Chelsea Green Publishing.
- Braun, S. (2017). Leader narcissism and outcomes in organizations. Frontiers in Psychology, 8, 773.
- Papageorgiou, K. A., et al. (2021). Differences in psychiatric symptoms between the UK and Greece prior to and during COVID-19. PMC.
- @TheNewsAgents (September 5, 2025). Post on X about Rayner’s resignation and hypocrisy.
- @nkulw (August 26, 2025). Post on X calling out Reeves’ CV lies.
- BBC News. (2025). Angela Rayner resigns after underpaying tax on Hove flat.
- Chartered Management Institute. (2023). Ageism in the UK workplace survey.
- Office for National Statistics. (2022). Labour market overview, UK: April–June 2022.
- CIPD. (2023). Health and wellbeing at work report.
- Institute for Government. (2024). Matt Hancock on COVID response.
- Big Brother Watch. (2018). Matt Hancock MP App privacy concerns.
- Daily Mail. (2023). Matt Hancock’s affair and resignation messages.
- BBC News. (2022). Matt Hancock finishes third on I’m a Celebrity.
- @GBNEWS (August 26, 2025). Post on X about Rayner’s third home controversy.
- The Guardian. (2025). Angela Rayner resigns over stamp duty row.
- Angela Rayner – Wikipedia. (2025). Political career overview.
- Sky News. (2025). Angela Rayner resigns after admitting she did not pay enough tax.
- The Guardian. (2025). Angela Rayner’s resignation letter in full.
- VroniPlag Wiki. (2011–2021). Investigations into German ministers’ plagiarism.
- CIPD. (2023). Health and wellbeing at work report.
- Bundeswehr. (2022). Mental health trends in German workforce.
- Gantt, A. C., et al. (2021). Differential effects of admiration and rivalry. Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 43, 172–188.
- American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.).
- @AmoneyResists (August 27, 2025). Post on X about malignant narcissists.
- ACAS. (2023). Constructive dismissal guidelines.