As I gaze down from the 39th floor of Cuba's tallest building the usually bustling streets of Havana are eerily deserted, for there is scarcely a drop of petrol to be found here.
Even if the PM clings on, we'll end up with all the things we voted against in 2015: higher taxes, harsher decarbonisation, more indulgence of Islamists and more cosying up to Brussels.
Economics, it has to be said, is rarely Labour's strong suit. The party's Manchester mayor, Andy Burnham, betrayed his ignorance of matters financial some weeks ago.
After his brush with political death in the wake of the Mandelson scandal, Prime Minister Keir Starmer boasted of his pride in leading 'the most working-class Cabinet in the history of this country'.
The British countryside is a racist hellscape, a 'white environment' hostile to all outsiders. That's seemingly the message from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs