sexta-feira, 17 de junho de 2022

London Playbook: The gift of freedom — Pull the other one — I’m an ethics adviser, Geidt me outta here

 


London Playbook: The gift of freedom — Pull the other one — I’m an ethics adviser, Geidt me outta here

BY EMILIO CASALICCHIO

June 17, 2022 8:13 am

https://www.politico.eu/newsletter/london-playbook/london-playbook-the-gift-of-freedom-pull-the-other-one-im-an-ethics-adviser-geidt-me-outta-here/

 

POLITICO London Playbook

By EMILIO CASALICCHIO

 

Good Friday morning. This is Emilio Casalicchio. Eleni Courea will be back in the Playbook hotseat on Monday morning.

 

WESTMINSTER INSIDER: S06 E04 — A boozy dinner with David Davis MP: This week Jack Blanchard sits down for dinner with former Brexit Secretary David Davis to discuss his 35-year career in politics. Over ribeye steak and too much Malbec in an exclusive Westminster restaurant, Davis muses on the Brexit negotiations which will prove his legacy, and his personal relations with David Cameron, Michel Barnier, Theresa May and other key players of the recent past.

 

SCOOP: Davis told Jack it could take a decade to solve the Irish border crisis created by Britain’s departure from the EU and admitted both sides in the 2016 referendum campaign underestimated the impact of Brexit on the island of Ireland. Write-up here.

 

DRIVING THE DAY

THE GIFT OF FREEDOM: Boris Johnson can put his feet up and light a cigar to kick off his birthday weekend, safe in the knowledge he has no official ethics adviser to ruin the festivities. The prime minister can be ambushed by cake and drink into the night in Downing Street and no one can send him mild-mannered complaint letters on government-headed paper that seethe with frustration between the insipid lines of civil service discourse.

 

Proud dad: Johnson will turn 58 on Sunday, which also happens to be Father’s Day, so he’ll be getting double the greeting cards from the BoJo brood.

 

But but but: As the PM contemplates edging closer toward his seventh decade, questions are still swirling over how his former ethics chief Lord Christopher Geidt came to storm out of government. The move — said to be because Johnson wanted to extend protective import tariffs on a few steel products — doesn’t quite add up. As far as Playbook can tell, both the trade department and the trade remedies watchdog that oversees these things had no idea Geidt had been asked about the issue, and no one can quite work out the explanation for consulting him in the first place.

 

Pull the other one: The suggestion Geidt quit because Johnson planned to breach World Trade Organization rules seems somewhat far fetched. For starters, there have been much worse things to resign over in the past 14 months, such as the whole golden wallpaper thing, the whole being misled about the whole golden wallpaper thing, all those lockdown parties in Downing Street, all those lies about all those lockdown parties in Downing Street, and that time the prime minister got a police fine but claimed it didn’t amount to a breach of the ministerial code and then rewrote the code. #Governmentofmessybitches (h/t POLITICO’s Esther Webber).

 

Tin foil hats on: It seems much more plausible that Geidt used the steel tariffs issue as an excuse to resign — or it was an excuse used to push him out of the job. As one Downing Street figure notes to the FT: “I think this is a contrived protest for resignation.” An official who worked with Geidt added to the Guardian: “It may be a convenient hill to die on, or the straw that broke the camel’s back, or perhaps both are true.”

 

Killer moments and bullets: In a deep dive into the ethics-meets-trade mashup, POLITICO’s Esther (with help from Graham Lanktree and your Playbook author) writes that two former Cabinet Office officials suggested the conflict over trade rules was not the “killer moment” but rather a convenient point at which to throw in the towel after a series of uncomfortable exchanges between Johnson and his official conscience. Catherine Haddon, senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank, said Geidt “was ready to walk and they gave him the bullet.”

 

The thing is: The trade remedies bullet was a pretty poor projectile. No one quite understands for what reason Geidt would have to be consulted on a government-wide decision to breach international law. Indeed, Playbook is told the government didn’t consult the ethics adviser when then-International Trade Secretary Liz Truss ignored the trade watchdog and extended the tariffs the first time 12 months ago.

 

Indeed: One former trade department official noted to the POLITICO team that a WTO panel would need to rule the tariff extension was illegal before it could be deemed so. “DIT and No. 10 seem to have got themselves into a bit of a mess on this,” the person said.

 

FWIW: Downing Street insists the PM would always seek the view of the ethics adviser when there is a question over something that could relate to the code. Playbook will let readers judge whether that sounds plausible.

 

The next problem … is that the government has been more than willing to breach international law on a regular basis. (See: Brexit.) “Geidt going is not about breaking international law because we obviously don’t care about that,” one government official told Playbook. “We’re fucking breaking international law like it’s one of our five a day.”

 

I’m an ethics adviser, Geidt me outta here: Alex Allan, the former ministerial standards watchdog who quit after being ignored over his report about Priti Patel bullying civil servants, told the BBC Newscast podcast the trigger for Geidt was a “combination of issues” around the lockdown parties and the TRA decision. Allan is one of the few people to have spoken to Geidt since he quit.

 

The damning thing is: The whole steel tariffs thing means Geidt’s true motive (unless it was, in fact, steel tariffs) has been all but lost, and he’s ended up doing Johnson a favor in making the PM look like the savior of steel communities. Penistone and Stocksbridge MP Miriam Cates told Playbook she was “delighted that the prime minister is such a strong supporter of our British steel industry,” while fellow red waller Jacob Young told his Insta followers he was “proud to support a government that backs our steel industry.”

 

And of course … Cabinet Minister Jacob Rees-Mogg (a Thatcherite who used to extol the wonders of trading on WTO terms) also hailed the PM as a darling of the steel sector on Newsnight. “Geidt’s problem is not many people will understand what’s really happened,” one former top civil servant lamented. “Plus he’s a man of honor with few comms skills up against someone utterly cunning and ruthless.”

 

THE DAMAGE IS DONE: The long-term issue will be whatever Downing Street does with the ethics adviser role, after making clear it could be headed for the guillotine. No one who was been watching this administration would be surprised if the post never got filled and the ethics regime was scrapped. In a statement last night, Lord Jonathan Evans, chair of the committee on standards in public life, said “removing this independent voice on standards issues at the heart of government would risk further damage to public perceptions of standards.”

 

Substantive risk: “The ministerial code is the only mechanism a civil servant can use to raise a complaint of misconduct, bullying or sexual harassment against a minister,” added Dave Penman, boss of the FDA union for top civil servants. “If the prime minister does not intend to replace Lord Geidt, then he must immediately put in place measures that ensure a civil servant can, with confidence, raise a complaint about ministerial misconduct.”

 

**Save the date – POLITICO Live’s virtual event “The unmet needs of immunocompromised patients post-COVID 19” is happening on June 29 at 12:00 p.m. and will take a critical look at how the health care sector can ensure that  immunocompromised patients are not left behind in the post-COVID 19 era. Register now!**

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