Finally, Boris Johnson’s ministers have had
enough of defending the monstrously indefensible
Polly
Toynbee
This cabinet of accomplices has calculated that
loyalty is doing their careers more harm than good
Tue 5 Jul
2022 20.59 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jul/05/boris-johnson-indefensible-cabinet-accomplices
What took
them so long? The chancellor and the health secretary have gone. Others may
have jumped before the ink is dry on this, kicking themselves for not taking
the lead as this cabinet of accomplices finally calculates that loyalty is
doing their careers more harm than good. Late, too late, they conclude that
protecting Big Dog for one more catastrophic Today programme interview will
finish off their chances for good.
Are these
the end of days for the prime minister? The party may yet need to prise his
fingers off the cliff-face before he crashes to the Tarpeian rock. Health
secretary Sajid Javid was first off the mark, so chancellor Rishi Sunak was
pipped to the post by a few minutes. Javid writes that the country needs a
“strong and principled Conservative party”. Yes indeed, but the country needed
this through every scandal that has engulfed Boris Johnson.
Sunak
echoed those words with an equally empty sentiment: “The public rightly expect
government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously.” Yes indeed,
but the country needed that before the Conservatives knowingly selected the
most unfit man in their clan to lead them.
Their pious
words turn to ash when considering how many times every member of the cabinet,
every slavish minister and every aspiring Conservative backbencher has defended
the monstrously indefensible behaviour of Boris Johnson. They stuck it out
through mendacity around law-breaking parties. They never flinched at gold
wallpaper that was funded by a Tory donor at £840 a roll. Nor even at trying to
leverage a £150,000 tree house. They voted for constitution-wrecking bills that
gifted Johnson Henry VIII-style powers to wield statutory instruments by
diktat, bypassing government time and again. They let him lie to the Queen
about proroguing parliament. The word is he plans even now to create another 50
Tory peers.
Sunak wrote
in his letter that he believes “the public are ready to hear the truth”. That’s
a confession: it means they have all sat through a quantity of untruth-telling.
It suggests the public already knows fundamental truths about their government.
“Ready” the public has been for some time now.
The two
ministers making “principled” resignations (and it seems likely that more will
follow) have tolerated so much that it suggests political calculation, not
moral principle, has prompted their resignations. Two catastrophic byelections
and a revolt by 41% of their backbenchers projected them on to this righteous
path. Those are the backbenchers who will select the next leader, so heeding
them is a career necessity – and the word from Westminster is that relatively
few MPs are still standing by the man they put there to win them a 80-seat
majority in 2019.
What was
the last straw? When a former permanent secretary, Lord McDonald, at last broke
the omertà of his tribe to step forward and say the prime minister was “wrong”
to claim he had never been warned about Chris Pincher’s pinching tendencies,
the game was up. The civil service may look back on the Johnson era with shame.
It may become the moment it had to review blind obedience to law-breaking and
blatant lying.
More truths
may emerge in time, perhaps tales from within the Home Office, for example,
where the home secretary was found guilty of bullying but whose ethics guardian
resigned instead of her. Few will be surprised that Priti Patel will not be
following the chancellor and health secretary – for where else would her future
lie but clinging on until the very end of Johnson’s days? Dominic Raab and Liz
Truss likewise are letting it be known they are staying “loyal”, as no doubt
there are Conservative party members’ votes to be gleaned from obedience to the
leader, come what may. And it’s no surprise that Nadine Dorries has tweeted
she’s “100%” backing Boris.
The manner
and precise timing of Johnson’s departure seems to be the only question left.
Very few expect him to fight the next election. The 1922 Committee could change
the rules instantly overnight and hold another leadership vote, with all the
signs that he would lose next time. Or they may wait for next week’s election
of a new committee minded to change the rules to allow another attempt at
defenestration within the year.
Who will
inherit the gold wallpaper if Johnson is hoisted out? Not one of those who have
sat silently acquiescent around the shamed cabinet table through all this
turpitude, if “principles” are indeed back in vogue.
Polly
Toynbee is a Guardian columnist
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