Boris Johnson’s ethics adviser caved to the
inevitable
Westminster-watchers see Christopher Geidt’s exit as
an honorable move — but one that’s been a long time coming.
BY ESTHER
WEBBER, GRAHAM LANKTREE AND EMILIO CASALICCHIO
June 17,
2022 12:05 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/boris-johnson-ethics-adviser-geidt-resignation/
LONDON —
Being Boris Johnson’s ethics adviser is a tough job, but somebody’s got to do
it. Or at least they did until now.
Christopher
Geidt dramatically quit as Johnson’s independent adviser this week,
relinquishing his role as the man tasked with policing ministers’ conduct. And
Downing Street won’t yet commit to replacing him.
While he’s
faced weeks of scrutiny over his stance on Johnson’s Partygate coronavirus
rule-breaking – including brutal media coverage of a parliamentary grilling on
the affair — the last straw appears to have been more prosaic: a technical row
over protective steel tariffs.
Westminster-watchers
were caught off guard by that reasoning — and some see a decent man who has
been looking for a way out for months as Johnson’s government reels from one
storm to another.
One former
head of a government department said Geidt’s problem was that “he’s a man of
honor, with few comms skills, up against someone utterly cunning and ruthless.”
The mystery
only serves to illustrate just how consistently Johnson has sought to disregard
normal Westminster rules and how, despite months of scandal, he continues to do
so.
Trade row
When the
exit came, Geidt didn’t exactly hold back. In a letter released Thursday, the
outgoing watchdog said Johnson had forced him into an “impossible and odious”
position by asking him to consider measures which he said risked a “deliberate”
breach of the ministerial code. In British political speak, that’s pretty
damning.
Downing
Street refused to confirm exactly what those “measures” were when pressed by
reporters, but Johnson’s own reply to Geidt specifies that they “might be seen
to conflict with obligations” under the World Trade Organization (WTO).
In his own
letter, Johnson specifically referenced the U.K.’s independent Trade Remedies
Authority, a body designed to weigh in on trade disputes.
But those
references have trade wonks scratching their heads, and are prompting wider
questions about why exactly Geidt pulled the trigger.
The TRA row
is certainly controversial. The government is considering extending a series of
tariffs meant to protect domestic steel producers from a flood of Chinese imports
— but critics say it’s flirting with a breach of international law.
The body,
set up to investigate claims of unfair trade practices, previously advised
ministers to scrap some of those safeguards. Concerns have been expressed by
other countries that keeping the measures in place would breach WTO rules.
A spokesman
for the prime minister suggested the matter was referred to Geidt because
breaching an international treaty could be considered a violation of the
ministerial code, which the ethics adviser oversees.
And yet
it’s not immediately clear that extending the steel protections would
necessarily break WTO rules. “In these cases the WTO panel rules on legality so
until a ruling the actions are not considered illegal or otherwise,” said one
former U.K. trade official.
It’s
equally unclear why the prime minister ended up asking Geidt for his advice at
this juncture, having not done so when the tariffs initially came up for review
and when Johnson’s administration has already been content to entertain actions
— particularly on the Brexit front — that challenge the international order.
EU
countries unanimously back Ukraine — except on its bid to join the EU
Speaking
Thursday, the PM’s spokesman insisted it was “not unusual in and of itself” for
the independent adviser to be consulted on such a matter.
Yet two
former Cabinet Office officials suggested a conflict over trade rules was not
the “killer moment” and instead marked a convenient point for Geidt to throw in
the towel.
‘Unsatisfactory’
Geidt took
on the job after engaging in the relatively genteel pursuits of breeding
Hebridean sheep and serving as private secretary to the queen. He was appointed
after his predecessor, Alex Allan, quit in protest when Johnson declined to
accept his finding that Home Secretary Priti Patel had bullied staff.
He’s since
faced a number of awkward challenges. His first big job was to investigate the
prime minister over funding arrangements for a refurbishment of the Downing
Street flat. He found the PM had acted “unwisely” — but cleared him of being
deliberately misleading.
It later
emerged that Johnson had withheld messages relevant to that investigation, but
Geidt said his boss had not broken the ministerial code. Instead, he described
the PM’s behavior as “plainly unsatisfactory.”
Geidt’s
role came under intense Westminster scrutiny amid Partygate, the
government-wide scandal over parties involving officials and ministers at the
height of the U.K.’s COVID-19 lockdowns.
In the wake
of a highly-critical report by a senior civil servant into the scandal, Geidt —
previously reserved — upped his criticism of Johnson, saying there was now a
“legitimate question” over whether the prime minister had broken the
ministerial code when he was fined by police for attending a lockdown
gathering.
Appearing
in front of a committee of MPs Tuesday, Geidt admitted “frustration” at
Johnson’s response to the Partygate affair — but he refused to be drawn on
whether his own powers should be strengthened as a result. MPs, and
Westminster’s parliamentary sketch-writers, were left exasperated.
Catherine
Haddon, senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank, said Geidt
was facing “a particularly difficult issue in the context of the ministerial
code, his role within it, and the government’s approach to the rule of law.”
“The
mystery is what was it about this particular case, but I think from Geidt’s
point of view he was ready to walk and they gave him the bullet,” Haddon said.
One
ex-Cabinet Office official pointed to a wider breakdown in relations at the
heart of government. They said: “If there had been trust, it seems like the
sort of issue that could be worked through. But if he thought the PM was a bad
faith actor then he had to go.”
Westminster
wags greeted news of Geidt’s resignation with jokes about who might possibly be
willing to take on the job — Star Wars baddie Darth Vader, perhaps, or his own
father.
But No. 10
responded by saying they in fact may not replace him at all. Instead, Johnson’s
spokesman said, the government is “carefully considering” how the functions of
the watchdog are best carried out.
Some think
replacing Geidt may simply be a waste of time under a prime minister who has
put a premium on doing things his own way.
“He doesn’t
listen, because everything has worked together in his own mind to demonstrate
that he’s that he’s infallible,” said one former ministerial colleague.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário