Analysis
A second reprieve for Suella Braverman could be a
tall order
Pippa
Crerar
Political
editor
Home secretary has won little good will from
colleagues since she was last – briefly – forced from office
Sun 21 May
2023 20.41 BST
When Suella
Braverman’s career as home secretary was last on the ropes – for sending an
official document from her personal email in a serious breach of the rules –
she received little support from cabinet minsters. “She’s a joke,” one said at
the time. “She shouldn’t be anywhere near high office.”
Yet within
six days she was back in the job, after Rishi Sunak calculated that it was
worth reinstating the leading rightwinger to the Home Office to win her support
for the Tory leadership bid which brought him to No 10.
It has not
been a smooth path. Within days of being back at the Home Office, she was
fighting for her job for a second time after she was accused – and denied –
ignoring legal advice on keeping asylum seekers at the overcrowded Manston
immigration centre in Kent.
As she
battled for her survival in the Commons, she angered critics, as well as some
on her own side, with her incendiary claim that asylum seekers crossing the
Channel in dinghies constituted an “invasion of our southern coast”.
She also bemoaned
a “broken” system which meant that “illegal migration is out of control”, with
no acknowledgment of who had been running the country over the previous 13
years.
The
following months brought more hard rhetoric on immigration, as the government’s
headline bill made its way through parliament, and a trip to Rwanda where she
made an off-colour joke that she was so impressed by the decor of the homes
being built for asylum seekers deported from the UK that she could use the
interior designer.
Yet migrants
aren’t the only ones caught up in Braverman’s culture war: environmental
protesters, human rights activists and equal rights campaigners have all been
in her sights too.
The passage
of time, and seven months back in the job, has done little to ease frustration
towards the home secretary among her Conservative colleagues.
Just last
week, despairing Tory MPs accused her of undermining Sunak’s authority and
making a bid for the future leadership of the party with a partisan speech at
the NatCon conference. Tory MPs privately condemned her. “Rishi needs to make
it clear to her that she is either a team player or a backbencher,” said one.
The latest
row over whether she broke the ministerial code by requesting a private
speeding awareness course is seen as a spectacular own goal – with several MPs
saying she would deserve her fate if it costs her her job for a second time.
Even
Downing Street insiders now may be starting to go cool, with one telling the
Guardian there is “no appetite” in No 10 to defend the home secretary and Sunak
himself stopping short of saying he had full confidence in her.
This
failure to give Braverman the benefit of the doubt on the speeding course row
is in stark contrast to Sunak’s apparent determination to stand by other
beleaguered ministers, including his former deputy prime minister, Dominic
Raab, until the very end.
“It’s all
about delivery,” says one Tory insider. “If she can get net migration down and
start getting to grips with the small boats crisis, then she’ll prove her
detractors wrong. But does anybody really think either of those are possible?”
In the
meantime, the judgment of Sunak, who by now is surely regretting promising
“integrity, professionalism and accountability” at every level of government
when he took office, is once again under question.

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