Outcry over Suella Braverman’s return as home
secretary
Opposition MPs and former sleaze watchdog criticise
move days after she resigned over security breach
Rajeev Syal
Home affairs editor
Tue 25 Oct
2022 19.36 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/oct/25/outcry-suella-braverman-return-home-secretary
Suella
Braverman’s return as home secretary, just days after being forced to resign
from the same post over a serious security breach, has sparked an outcry from
opposition MPs and a former sleaze watchdog.
The MP for
Fareham stepped down six days ago from Liz Truss’s administration after
admitting to breaking the ministerial code by sending an official document
deemed “sensitive” from her personal email.
Her
reappointment on Tuesday came hours after Rishi Sunak pledged to lead the
Conservative party with “integrity, professionalism and accountability” on the
steps of No 10.
A former
sleaze watchdog questioned whether her reappointment was appropriate,
particularly because Braverman’s rule breach has not been examined by an ethics
adviser.
Alistair
Graham, the former chair of the committee on standards in public life, said:
“Normally the prime minister would have consulted a ministerial adviser for
advice. A breach of the ministerial code is seen as a serious matter and would
make any minister an inappropriate appointment to one of the four most senior
positions in government.”
The
government is yet to reappoint an independent adviser on ministerial ethics
since Christopher Geidt’s resignation in June during the Partygate scandal.
Yvette
Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said Sunak was already putting party before
country only hours into his premiership.
“He has
just appointed Suella Braverman to be home secretary again a week after she
resigned for breaches of the ministerial code, security lapses, sending
sensitive government information through unauthorised personal channels, and
following weeks of nonstop public disagreements with other cabinet ministers,”
she said.
She added:
“Our national security and public safety are too important for this kind of
chaos.”
Braverman
admitted to a “technical breach” of the ministerial code after clashing with
Truss and the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, last week over their plans to relax
immigration rules.
Downing
Street had shared immigration proposals with the home secretary, which she then
attempted to email to John Hayes, a fellow member of the Common Sense Group of
Tory MPs.
However,
she also accidentally sent it to a staff member of another Tory MP who shares
Hayes’s surname.
Government
sources said the draft written statement was deemed highly sensitive because it
related to immigration rules, which could have major implications for
market-sensitive growth forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility.
They added
that Braverman’s email had constituted two contraventions of the ministerial
code: by sharing a statement ahead of time and by sending it from a personal
account.
Braverman
criticised Truss in her resignation letter. “I have made a mistake; I accept
responsibility; I resign,” she said pointedly, adding she had “serious
concerns” about Truss’s commitment to the 2019 manifesto.
Braverman’s
return to government also raises questions about Sunak’s plans for immigration
and whether a deal has been struck to keep the MP, a key figure in the Tories’
European Research Group and the Common Sense Group, onboard with Sunak’s new
administration.
Braverman
has advocated keeping net migration to “tens of thousands” and wishes to stick
to the Conservatives’ 2019 manifesto pledge of reducing overall migration.
Sunak is under pressure from business to ease migration rules to fill vacancies
and increase growth.
Braverman’s
friends have said she was appalled that Truss and Hunt wanted her to announce a
liberalisation of immigration to make it easier for the OBR to say the government
would hit its growth targets – a key plank in Hunt’s strategy to restore market
confidence.
The Home
Office under Braverman is expected to continue to emphasise the Rwanda plan as
a way of dealing with the rising number of people coming to the UK by dangerous
small boat journeys across the Channel.
During the
Conservative party leadership campaign over the summer, Sunak announced plans
for an annual cap on the number of refugees the UK accepts and said he would do
“whatever it takes” to ensure the Rwanda scheme worked.
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