The Guardian view on the Gray report: a diagnosis of
sick government
Editorial
Boris Johnson’s claims to be taking responsibility are
meaningless when he cannot show sincere contrition or empathy
‘He could not conceal the self-pity, considering
himself to be a victim of excessive, prurient interrogation. He looked more
bored than sorry.’
‘Mr
Johnson is wrong if he thinks people are ready to “move on” from questions
about parties.’
Wed 25 May
2022 18.49 BST
Of the many
things Boris Johnson has told the House of Commons, perhaps the least credible
of all is Wednesday’s claim to be “humbled” by Sue Gray’s report into Downing
Street parties during the pandemic.
There was
no humility in the subsequent debate or press conference on the topic. Mr
Johnson, a practised liar, cannot even fake contrition. The Gray report
describes systemic breaches of Covid regulations in Downing Street, committed
knowingly and with contempt for the idea of professional government.
There was
excessive drinking, beginning early in the day and ending late at night. There
was vomiting and fighting. Staff were warned to beware of cameras, to leave by
back doors, for fear of their behaviour being revealed. A senior official spoke
of “getting away with” one event. Cleaning and security staff were treated with
disrespect. The karaoke machine was supplied by the prime minister’s adviser on
ethics.
All of it
would be unacceptable in any serious workplace. In the seat of government, it
is an affront to democracy. But that is not the limit of the offence. The rules
being flouted were devised to save lives in a national emergency. Their
observance by the general public kept bereaved families from gathering at
funerals and prevented relatives visiting the bedsides of dying loved ones. It
is hard to conceive of a more egregious insult to those who suffered through
the pandemic than the discovery that their sacrifice was being mocked in the
prime minister’s official residence. Only his inability to show genuine remorse
matches it for cruelty.
On
Wednesday, Mr Johnson told MPs he took responsibility, but failed to explain
how. The assertion was no more convincing than his affectation of humility.
Most of his Commons performance was taken up with bogus excuses, cavilling,
deflection and dissembling. He could not conceal the self-pity, considering
himself to be a victim of excessive, prurient interrogation. He looked more
bored than sorry.
Even when
the object of the exercise was to address public anger, the prime minister
could not conceal his impatience at being made to answer for anything to
anyone. That combination of arrogance and entitlement is the origin of the
whole scandal. Mr Johnson’s defence relies on the assertion that he was unaware
of rule-breaking, which is improbable given his proximity to events, and absurd
given that his indisciplined and dissolute character gave his staff the
permission to do as they pleased.
Mr Johnson
is wrong if he thinks people are ready to “move on” from questions about
parties. He cannot grasp the gravity of his offence, because doing so requires
empathy with those who feel their hard work and personal sacrifices during the
pandemic have been belittled.
There is a
line of transmission from the leader’s narcissistic indifference to the
interests of anyone but himself to the pattern of chaotic government, unequal
to the serious challenges it faces.
Conservative
MPs who continue to support their leader, supposing that the present turbulence
is a squall that can be navigated to reach a more competent phase of
government, are delusional. They are also degrading themselves and their party
through complicity with a prime minister whose toxic unfitness for office is a
corrosive substance, eating away at the foundations of British democracy.
The Gray
report cannot bring an end to the matter because it describes symptoms of an
ongoing syndrome – a moral debilitation in politics that spreads outwards from
the prime minister. Tory MPs have it in their power to stop the contagion by
removing their leader, but they do not. It is a failure of courage and
conscience for which they must one day pay a heavy electoral price.
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