Dominic Raab in peril as No 10 refuses to say if
Sunak knew of complaints
Downing Street won’t answer whether PM was aware of
possible complaints about Raab’s alleged bullying before appointing him
Peter
Walker and Aletha Adu
Wed 1 Feb
2023 18.05 GMT
Dominic
Raab’s position is looking increasingly threatened after No 10 repeatedly
refused to say whether Rishi Sunak knew of complaints about his behaviour
before appointing him to the cabinet.
With the
position of Raab, the deputy prime minister and justice secretary, firmly in
the spotlight after Sunak’s dismissal of Nadhim Zahawi at the weekend, Keir
Starmer used prime minister’s questions to ask why he was still in his post.
Speaking
after the exchanges, Sunak’s press secretary refused to be drawn on whether No
10 was aware of possible complaints about Raab’s alleged bullying and abrasive
behaviour before he was appointed to the government in October. “The prime
minister was not aware of any formal complaints at the time of appointing
Dominic Raab,” she said. “Following formal complaints being made, the prime
minister asked for the facts to be established.”
Pressed a
number of times about whether Sunak had been told about informal or other
allegations about bullying or abusive behaviour by Raab before forming his
government in October, the press secretary would only repeat that the prime
minister was “not aware of any formal complaints at the time of the
appointment”.
On
Wednesday, the Times reported that officials had highlighted what were called
“issues” with Raab in his previous ministerial roles before Sunak gave him his
current job.
Previously,
the Observer reported that concerns about Raab’s behaviour towards officials
were raised during his time as Brexit secretary in 2018.
Raab is
being investigated by Adam Tolley KC, an outside employment barrister appointed
by Sunak after complaints about his conduct, now involving as many as 24 civil
servants. The deputy prime minister denies any wrongdoing.
It has now
emerged that among those to give evidence have been the top civil servants at
all three of the departments Raab has led: the now defunct Brexit department,
the Foreign Office, and the justice department.
The FDA
union, which represents senior civil servants, said on Wednesday that the
seriousness of the claims meant Raab should be suspended pending the outcome of
the investigation.
Dave
Penman, the union’s general secretary, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “If
that was any other employee, if that was a permanent secretary in the civil
service, they would in all likelihood be suspended from their job while that
investigation took place.”
During
PMQs, Starmer challenged Sunak to take action over Raab, asking: “How would he
feel if one of his friends or relatives was being forced to work for a bully,
simply because the man at the top was too weak to do anything about it?”
Again using
PMQs to try to portray Sunak as ineffective, Starmer tackled him on the sacking
of Zahawi for breaches of the ministerial code, and two separate issues linked
to Boris Johnson, the former prime minister.
At one
point, Starmer directly compared Sunak to Johnson: “He’s just like one of his
predecessors, who treated questions about conduct as something to brush off,
who thought that ducking responsibility was a perfectly reasonable response for
a prime minister.
“In
fairness, his predecessor didn’t go around pretending he was a paragon of
integrity and accountability.”
Starmer
also tackled the PM about what he knew before sacking Zahawi as Tory party
chair and a cabinet minister on Sunday, after an investigation found he had
broken the ministerial code by failing to declare an HMRC investigation into
his tax affairs.
After Sunak
referred the Labour leader to the report by his ethics adviser, Laurie Magnus,
which led to Zahawi’s dismissal, Starmer pointed to a series of newspaper
reports about the HMRC investigation in July, three months before Sunak made
Zahawi a minister.
“Is he
saying his officials hid this information from him, or was he just too
incurious to ask any questions?” Starmer asked. “His defence is: nobody told
me; I didn’t know; I didn’t ask any questions.”
Starmer
ended by asking Sunak about the appointment of Richard Sharp as BBC chair after
Sharp had allegedly helped Johnson acquire a £800,000 loan facility from
another rich businessman, and the £200,000-plus bill to provide Johnson with
legal support for the Commons inquiry into lockdown parties in No 10.
Starmer
said: “The Tory party’s addiction to sleaze and scandal has done huge damage to
this country, and the cost to the public keeps adding up. Surely even this
prime minister could put his foot down, stand up to his old boss and tell him:
he made the mess, he can pick up the bill.”
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