Dear All
In the battle that is politics, you occasionally,
occasionally find an act that makes you sit up and take notice; Sajid Javid has
dramatically resigned as the Chancellor just weeks before the Budget. The
reason for his resignation is that Boris Johnson wanted all Javid’s special
advisers to resign. When someone is a leader, they are responsible for the
team, what they do, how they act and their welfare and security. Clearly Sajid
Javid took that responsibility to heart.
So; why should all of Javid’s Spads be asked
to resign in the first place?
To lose your job without cause would be a monstrous
injustice no matter what side of the political divide you are fighting on. One
clue to the mass ‘sacking’ could be that In September, Sonia Khan, a Treasury
media adviser, was escorted by armed police from Downing St. Her removal from
government came after a confrontation with No 10's chief strategist Dominic
Cummings over her contact with those close to Philip Hammond, the former
Chancellor. Cummings is turning out to be a bit of a Rasputin figure in Boris
Johnson’s Government.
In politics when it comes to advisors, the
rule of thumb is when the advisor becomes the story, they have to go. Is Dominic
Cummings sailing into those waters, clearly to me, it seems that the wider
Conservative Party doesn’t have any time for him. When Boris Johnson goes, so
will Cummings go as well, I think he is smart enough to know the next leader of
the Conservatives wouldn’t have any time for him. And with Sajid Javid’s
resignation, his political capital for standing by his team will no doubt win
him pundits in the party.
In the cloak and dagger world of politics,
it is said that Dominic Cummings has set up a "network of spies" to
watch special advisers suspected of passing over information to journalists.
Leaking in politics isn’t new, it is a tool used by government to test the water
on new ideas and policies; it is also a torpedo which can sink a career or a
government. Government is built on trust, and the press and politicians are
joined at the hip. It is no surprise that stories get out because both
politicians and the press feed off each other.
You could say depending on the subject,
leaking is a necessary safeguard, but in matters of national security leaking
is unacceptable. National security is increasingly linked with economic and financial
security, so the scope of what is acceptable to leak is narrowing. With the
resignation of Sajid Javid this means a reshuffle in Boris Johnson’s Cabinet,
not something he would wish, given the budget, is only a few weeks away.
Whoever replaces Sajid Javid will probably do a competent job but he won’t be
as good; or seen as being good, his appointment is made under a cloud. The new
Chancellor is Rishi Sunak, the 39-year-old Chief Secretary of the Treasury,
typical he is claimed to be a rising star, until Javid resigned however, his
rising star status had stopped.
A source close to Sajid Javid said:
"He has turned down the job of
Chancellor of the Exchequer. The Prime Minister said he had to fire all
his special advisers and replace them with Number 10 special advisers to make
it one team. The Chancellor said no self-respecting minister would accept those
terms."
I agree with Sajid Javid, these terms are
unacceptable, it would make have made the Chancellor an outsider in what is
supposed to be his own team, there would be no loyalty, and no trust in such a
setup. I think either in the short or long term, this idea is dangerously
unworkable; it has all the hallmarks of the East German Stasti about it. A
minister must be able to have frank discussions with his or her team in order
if policy is wrong it can be worked through. Under Dominic Cummings, this type
of frank discussion wouldn’t be able to take place because his spies would
report to him and we would see this as an anti Boris narrative. It is a recipe
for disaster and mistrust; it would mean Ministers who disagree with policy
would have to find a new avenue for taking their concerns forward which
excludes “their” spads. Under this approach, Ministers could feel that having
no spads is better than having a Cummings spy in their office.
Shadow chancellor John McDonnell noted:
“Dominic Cummings has clearly won the
battle to take absolute control of the Treasury and install his stooge as
Chancellor.”
Ian Murray, the Labour MP for Edinburgh
South, said:
"This extraordinary reshuffle has
revealed who is really in charge of this government: Dominic Cummings. Sajid
Javid has shown a loyalty to his team that is all too rare in politics,
standing up to the Trump-style politics on display from No 10. The reshuffle
demonstrates that we need a Labour Party at full strength to stand up to
Johnson and his puppet master, because the country deserves better than this
shambles. That’s why Labour must choose change, not continuity.”
Ed Davey for the Liberal Democrats said "Boris
Johnson’s reshuffle is in tatters. He has lost his Chancellor a mere month from
the Budget. Like every crisis at No 10 you can see Dominic Cummings
lurking in the background. This is the Conservatives' own unelected bureaucrat,
unaccountable to the public attempting to control every part of Government”.
The resignation of Sajid Javid is a huge
blow to Boris Johnson, and although there is a full blown Cabinet reshuffle in
progress, the results of which will become clearer as the day goes on. I doubt
this reshuffle event will overshadow what happened to Sajid Javid. It is far
too early in the Premiership of Boris Johnson to allow this type of disruptive nonsense
to have taken place. What I feel is that at some stage, the influence of Dominic
Cummings will be brought to an end, either he will be sacked or there will be a
revolt in the Conservative ranks against him. The Conservatives have always run
a tight ship which is why they have seen off the Labour Party in countless
elections. Cummings could destroy that unity, and if Boris doesn’t do
something, he will find out how ruthless the Conservatives are at getting rid
of leaders.
Finally, Cabinet reshuffles come and go,
but today, we have seen a potential candidate for Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom emerge, Sajid Javid, a man willing to standby his team to the end. In the world of politics, this kind of integrity is few and far between, Boris better wake up to what is happening around him. It only takes a small stone in your shoe to stop a long journey dead in its tracks.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow
University
1 comment:
My thoughts exactly, George. I think Boris might not srrve his full five years as PM. Non elected officials should never be allowed to dictate policy. I bet Sajid will challenge Boris within 2 years. QT from Dundee tonight. Could be, ok will be split down the middle as usual.
Post a Comment