Oliver Dowden: Tory fixer who may have eye on
quick return to cabinet
Party co-chair’s decision to quit over byelection
losses leaves him handily placed if Boris Johnson is deposed
A combination of hard work, loyalty and ideological
fervour made Oliver Dowden a valued minister for Boris Johnson.
Peter
Walker Political correspondent
@peterwalker99
Fri 24 Jun
2022 09.23 BST
Oliver Dowden
is such a consummate Conservative insider and fixer that it may feel almost
paradoxical that he has become the first Boris Johnson-era minister to step
above the parapet and resign as a consequence of the government’s recent woes.
More on
brand was the fact that Dowden, in his letter to Johnson saying he was stepping
down as Tory party co-chair, insisted that poor local election results, capped
by a disastrous double byelection loss on Thursday, had made his position
untenable.
“We cannot
carry on with business as usual. Somebody must take responsibility,” Dowden
wrote – and while he insisted this was him, others will see an implicit finger
of blame pointing instead at the prime minister.
Thus ends
Dowden’s time in the cabinet, at least for now. But his decision to opt for
what many Tory colleagues will see as the honourable choice will leave him
handily placed for a return if Johnson is deposed – something an operator as
canny as Dowden will surely realise.
And few
understand Tory internal politics better than Dowden, whose time within the
party long pre-dates his election in 2015 as MP for Hertsmere in Hertfordshire,
an ultra-safe seat he had been chosen to fight the previous year, seeing off
competition from Rishi Sunak among others.
Educated at
a state school in Watford and then at Cambridge, Dowden set aside a law degree
to briefly teach in Japan before, aside from a stint in PR, working largely for
the Conservative party, first arriving when Michael Howard was leader.
He was
David Cameron’s deputy chief of staff when selected as a potential MP, and he
has worked closely on party and government matters with Theresa May and, as
party co-chair since September last year, Johnson.
Known near
universally to party colleagues as “Olive”, the legacy of an early
typographical error, Dowden took less than three years in parliament to get his
first junior ministerial job. Considered unflappable and hard-working, he rose
through the Cabinet Office and Treasury before becoming culture secretary under
Johnson in 2020.
There,
Dowden belied his superficial resemblance to an easily shocked and slightly
liberal Church of England vicar to become an enthusiastic culture warrior,
leading a “war on woke” against museums and other institutions that questioned
the legacy of slavery or sought to remove statues.
It is a
role he extended into the more obviously partisan job of party chair, with a
Twitter feed heavy on government talking points – currently the campaign to
persuade voters that the rail strikes are the fault of the Labour party.
This
combination of hard work, loyalty and ideological fervour made Dowden a valued
minister for Johnson. If he is now to be an opponent of the prime minister –
and his resignation letter pointedly did not express loyalty – he could become
an equally formidable one.

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