Britain’s Tories get queazy about sleaze
Ethics and integrity are set to dominate the contest
to succeed Boris Johnson as UK prime minister.
BY ELENI
COUREA AND EMILIO CASALICCHIO
July 8,
2022 4:02 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/britain-tories-get-queazy-sleaze-boris-johnson/
LONDON —
The Conservative Party has decided it has a problem with integrity.
Boris
Johnson’s resignation, which came after months of building pressure over
concerns about his conduct in office, has fired the starting gun on a Tory
leadership contest that will center around the importance of ethics and
integrity in politics.
But the
contenders to replace him — and there are many — will struggle to wipe their
hands clean of the sleaze scandals that have engulfed Johnson’s government.
The trigger
for the domino effect that saw more than 50 members of Johnson’s administration
quit, was the resignation of Health Secretary Sajid Javid on Tuesday night
followed minutes later by that of Chancellor Rishi Sunak. Both, according to
their public statements and private briefings from their allies, resigned
because they felt No. 10 Downing Street’s handling of a row concerning sexual
misconduct allegations against senior MP Chris Pincher had been the final
straw.
Whether by
their own volition or because they correctly read the consensus among those at
the top of the party, Javid and Sunak’s decision to move against the prime
minister unleashed an outpouring of discomfort and frustration with a leader
who appeared to believe normal rules didn’t apply to him.
There were
signs, too, that concerns about Johnson’s integrity were starting to hurt the
party at the ballot box. Less than two weeks ago, the Conservatives suffered
two painful by-election defeats, causing many senior Tories to speculate — some
publicly, more privately — about the damage their leader was doing to the
party. When Johnson this week conceded he had been warned about Pincher’s
behavior but had “forgotten,” many could no longer stomach supporting the prime
minister.
Boris
Johnson has resigned but who will replace him from the Tory ranks?
Research by
the UCL Constitution Unit found in January that U.K. voters value integrity
most in political leaders. When asked to “imagine that a future prime minister
has to choose between acting honestly and delivering the policy that most
people want,” 71 percent of those surveyed chose honesty and only 16 percent
chose delivery.
Leadership
campaign teams are already talking up their candidates’ integrity credentials.
“The most
important thing to Rishi is honesty, integrity and competency,” said a
supporter of the former chancellor, who is expected to mount a leadership bid
within days. “He is fundamentally loyal and remained loyal through difficult
periods, particularly in the last eight months or so, but ultimately the party
and the country has to come first.”
Allies of
Sunak had been urging him to quit for months, one explained, particularly when
he was fined by police for attending a lockdown-breaking gathering in the
Cabinet room in Downing Street for Johnson’s birthday.
Javid, who
is also known to be preparing a run for the leadership, told the House of
Commons in a resignation speech this week: “Treading the tightrope between
loyalty and integrity has become impossible in recent months, and I will never
risk losing my integrity.”
Cleaner
than you
But both
Javid and Sunak have faced controversies of their own.
Sunak
suffered huge reputational damage when the Independent reported in April that
his wife Akshata Murthy had non-dom status, meaning that she did not pay U.K.
taxes on income earned abroad. Soon afterward, Javid disclosed that he had held
non-dom status for six years while working as a banker.
Even
without individual controversies, other Tory leadership candidates will
struggle to shake the sleaze that has dogged Johnson’s administration.
Allegations of sexual impropriety against Pincher had been circling around
Westminster for years, and wannabe leaders may face questions about what they
were aware of.
Their
stance on issues of integrity more widely over the past year will be
scrutinized. Several will have backed the government in a bid to block a
sanction against Owen Paterson, who had been found guilty of an “egregious”
breach of lobbying rules by the parliamentary standards commissioner. The
government eventually U-turned and Paterson resigned as an MP.
Any of the
candidates who recently served as ministers will be asked why they propped up
Johnson’s government during successive sleaze scandals.
Suella
Braverman, the attorney general, has announced she will run. Tom Tugendhat, the
chairman of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, is expected to
stand and has already amassed support from Tory moderates.
Other
likely candidates are Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss,
former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Trade Minister Penny Mordaunt and former
Brexit Minister Steve Baker. Defense Secretary Ben Wallace and the former Chief
Whip Mark Harper are also tipped as potential contenders.
Johnson has
said he will stay in No. 10 Downing Street while the party elects his
successor. This is expected to happen by the end of August.
A new
executive of Tory’s organizing group, the 1922 committee, will be elected on
Monday, and will approve the process for the leadership election then, a member
of the committee said. Candidate nominations are expected to open early in the
week.
The contest
is likely to be a rapid one, with parliamentary stages completed before the
summer and a new leader elected before the Commons returns from its summer
recess in September.
What could
delay things is an intervention from the Conservative Party board — which will
need to sign off the timetable — and could argue that there needs to be a
longer campaign with hustings in different parts of the country, as happened
when Theresa May resigned in 2019.
For a party
wanting to move on from scandal, this will be a long summer of talk about
sleaze.

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