Evade, gaslight, attack: this is the playbook of
a corrupt company, not a government
Armando
Iannucci
All organisations take on the characteristics of the
person controlling them. But what if that person is a sociopath?
Fri 4 Feb
2022 13.57 GMT
If the
government were a company, the shareholders would have thrown out the chairman
and board of directors by now. If it were a school, Ofsted inspectors would
have judged it inadequate and put it into special measures. If there had
potentially been lawbreaking, the police would have been involved a lot sooner.
But the government knows it is bigger than any such institution, and
consequently thinks it can’t be moved.
Its
behaviour over the past few weeks has chillingly echoed the pattern adopted by
many organisations accused of something horrendous, which is to double down,
evade, attack accusers, hide behind investigations, and ultimately use the
shield of an apology to say – as Mark Zuckerberg has been saying for half his
life – that clearly we didn’t get everything right, and we must now look to a
future where such things never happen again.
Look at the
examples of churches hiding abusive priests, banks involved in money
laundering, racist cricket clubs, national broadcasters disciplining a
duplicitous reporter, a political party investigating antisemitism, specialist
care homes looking into complaints of assault, police departments investigating
failings within their ranks or schools protecting an abusive teacher. They all
consistently adopt a classic and rotten playbook now being used with some
commitment by the prime minister and his cabinet. After stern denials comes
manufactured outrage, for example, in the wake of the Allegra Stratton video:
“I was also furious to see that clip”. Then comes a firm commitment to
investigate, “to establish the facts and report back as soon as possible”.
At this
early stage, the organisation’s instincts is to police itself, so keeping any
findings away from the public sphere. Unfortunately, in this instance Simon
Case, whom Boris Johnson had only recently appointed to his job as cabinet
secretary, had to recuse himself since he appeared to have held a gathering in
his own office.
No worries.
There are other blunter but heftier weapons in the backpack. Sue Gray may be
more formidable, but in a neat jiujitsu move, you can use that to your
advantage. “Look, we’ve asked no less ferocious an investigator than Sue Gray
to examine this, so that shows how transparent we’re being.” Since everything’s
above board ( with someone who wasn’t your first choice), this gives you the
chance to question the motives of those who persist in challenging you and the
opportunity to belittle them. It’s a thread that connects failing schools or
special care units that vilify complaining families, Labour party members who
call out antisemitism being attacked as disgruntled opponents, a graphic
designer being sidelined by the BBC after raising concerns about Martin Bashir,
or Ghislaine Maxwell’s lawyers questioning the sanity of those who accused her.
With
“partygate”, the same playbook has been used, taking in attacks on the media
for wanting to engage in tittle-tattle, Jacob Rees-Mogg denouncing the Scottish
Tory leader, Douglas Ross, as “a lightweight figure” and the sinister decision
by Johnson himself to drag a rightwing online conspiracy theory about Keir
Starmer and Jimmy Savile into the broad daylight of mainstream news.
With
gaslighting in full throttle, a parallel manoeuvre is also under way: to hide
behind legal technicalities wherever possible. These can often involve absurd
twists of logic, as when, for example, Prince Andrew’s lawyers tried to argue
he couldn’t be sued since he was protected by an agreement the complainant had
made with a dead paedophile. There was a degree of absurdity on Tuesday when
the disinformation minister, Chris Philp, before a parliamentary committee
scrutinising his online safety bill, refused to distance himself from the
online disinformation about Starmer – the kind that his bill is intended to
root out. It’s a position that has also been taken publicly this week by our
ministers for culture and justice.
But that’s
how the rot spreads. If a sociopath is at the heart of an organisation, then
the organisation itself begins to take on the characteristics of the person
controlling it. Each one close to him or her becomes infected, because it’s now
too late to do anything else. The best they can do now is delay; say they’d
love to tell you everything, but their hands are tied. They rely on the fact
that we’ve all got lives to be getting on with, we can’t keep paying lawyers,
and some of us have died, while others are just tired. A government is
different, though: its adversaries are, potentially, all of us. It may be that
there are just too many of us following the smell of something rotten for this
to end cleanly for them.
Armando
Iannucci is a film and TV writer whose credits include The Thick of It, In the
Loop, and Veep
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