Replacing PM’s ethics adviser may be as
unfeasible as the role itself
Analysis: job to uphold ministerial code has been
tainted by Boris Johnson’s undermining actions
Jessica Elgot
@jessicaelgot
Wed 15 Jun 2022
20.09 BST
Who would
be an ethics adviser to this government? Unless there is a figure lurking in
the wings, it is unclear who would be prepared to fill one of the most tainted
jobs in public life.
It is
always possible that No 10 has an immediate replacement in mind. But Boris
Johnson found it hard enough to recruit this one – it took five months for him
to appoint Lord Geidt, after the bitter circumstances around the resignation of
the preceding ethics adviser, Sir Alex Allan, in November 2020.
Allan told
Johnson that his home secretary, Priti Patel, had broken the ministerial code
on bullying. The prime minister then refused to sack her, making Allan’s
position untenable.
Finding
anyone willing to advise Johnson on ethics when he had already shown himself willing
to comprehensively overrule their advice was always going to prove tricky.
Even at the
11th hour during the run up to Geidt’s appointment, it was rumoured that the
long-serving palace aide had cold feet after the publication of allegations by
Dominic Cummings that the prime minister had broken the law.
When he was
appointed, those who had previously worked with Geidt said he would not be
Johnson’s patsy. But there were several instances where his conclusions pulled
the prime minister out of the mire.
Immediately
tasked with investigating the donations towards the refurbishment of the prime
minister’s flat – dubbed “Wallpapergate” by some in the press – Geidt cleared
Johnson of any wrongdoing, though he was just critical enough in the report to
avoid allegations of a full whitewash.
Yet he
became a favoured target of Cummings in his blog posts, accused of deliberately
not seeking out key witnesses for interview over what he alleged were “illegal
donations”.
Geidt came
under renewed scrutiny when he suggested in a letter to Johnson that he might
have broken the ministerial code – which Johnson then cleared himself of doing
in his reply to Geidt.
In an
increasingly uncomfortable evidence session in front of MPs, Geidt appeared to
struggle in real-time with his oxymoronic role as a guardian of the prime
minister’s ethical code who is subject to the whim of the prime minister. At
one stage, he tellingly described himself as an “asset of the prime minister”
and admitted it was difficult to rid himself of the impression that it was a
“cosy” relationship.
Members of
the committee put it as politely as they could that Geidt was putting himself
in an untenable position. “It will have been very difficult for him to read
stories about how he was a patsy, that is absolutely not how he views himself
at all,” one senior Whitehall source said.
If there is
no immediate replacement, senior Whitehall sources now suspect Johnson may
dispense with the role altogether, given the difficulty of recruiting a
successor. Johnson has already rewritten the ministerial code to limit the
impact of its enforcement.
It now
makes clear that ministers will not always be expected to resign for breaching
the code of conduct – they could apologise or temporarily lose their pay
instead.
The changes
also meant Geidt did not gain the power to launch his own investigations,
though he told MPs that he would expect to be granted an investigation if he
requested one. Johnson rewrote the foreword to the ministerial code, removing
all references to honesty, integrity, transparency and accountability.
There is
likely to be a very limited pool of candidates who would be prepared to put
their reputation on the line for a prime minister who has made clear how little
store he sets by the code they must preserve.

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