CARTOON : Ben Jennings
Thu 29 Jun 2023 21.44 BSTLast modified on Fri 30 Jun
2023 00.00 BST
The Partygate probe should have stopped at
Johnson, and let his tinpot army fade into obscurity
Simon
Jenkins
MPs feel they have to assert their authority after his
insults, but going after his friends risks looking petty and partisan
Thu 29 Jun
2023 15.47 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jun/29/partygate-boris-johnson-mps-friends
The House
of Commons privileges committee is besotted with Boris Johnson. No sooner did
we breathe sighs of relief as he disappeared over the horizon three weeks ago,
than the committee has hauled him back for another thrashing in the headlines.
This time
it is aiming at his “friends and allies”, who called it a kangaroo court and a
witch-hunt. These friends stand accused for their vociferous and unprecedented
remarks, offending, harassing, belittling and showering the committee with
contempt. It has duly “named” them, though to what end is unclear.
Everyone knew
their names. We were fed up with Nadine Dorries, Jacob Rees-Mogg, Priti Patel
and assorted peers, all honoured by Johnson, desperately defending him as the
committee’s hearings into Partygate dragged on. They argued, in private and in
public, that Partygate was not the most earth-shattering of offences for which
Johnson might reasonably have been condemned. No one died. He grovelled,
apologised profusely, and returned to business. He said he did not
“intentionally” deceive MPs because, like Don Giovanni, he genuinely thought he
was telling the truth at the time.
Critics of
the committee, who extend beyond Johnson’s friends, also point out that prime
ministers distort, befuddle and deceive at the dispatch box week after week.
Attacking them is the job of the opposition, which it also does week after
week. Must all statements at the dispatch box now be subject to a Commons
inquiry? If this committee’s job is to protect the good name and reputation of
the house, why has it been so silent on corruption, conflicts of interest,
dodgy aides and fiddled expenses?
In sum, the
case against the committee’s latest intervention is that is being absurdly
oversensitive. It is surely a right of MPs to express a view on a matter that
had long reduced the hothouse of national politics to a frenzy. Surely we can
get over it and move on.
In
response, the committee argues that under Johnson, parliament was persistently
bypassed and deceived. Its job is to guard against that. Its work is unique.
Members of parliament enjoy the constitutional right to speak freely in the
chamber, untrammelled by fear of legal action or other retribution. That in
turn demands they firmly police themselves. The committee is that policeman.
That is why
respect for the committee’s authority is vital. The membership carries a
governing party majority, while the chairwoman is drawn from the opposition.
Parliament may neglect any obligation to reform itself. The weight of history,
so long regarded as its glory, risks plunging it into political irrelevance.
But it must guard its rights and dignities and be respected. Johnson’s friends
did not respect it; they insulted it.
The
committee can also point out that in this case it was merely advising the
Commons. It was for MPs collectively to pass judgment on Johnson, a decision he
funked by resigning his seat. In the event, only seven friends voted against
the committee. A reasonable conclusion is that the committee was right to take
Johnson’s mendacity to the Commons seriously, but its response does appear
disproportionate. The drawn-out investigation of Johnson’s role in Partygate,
three years after the event, was dilatory and thus appeared partisan. So did
the severity of the punishment, in effect seeking to strip Johnson of his seat
and his job, by triggering a recall election.
By now it
has more than achieved its goal. It has driven Johnson out of parliament with
the overwhelming support of MPs. It can surely ignore Johnson’s tinpot barmy
army. Let them dribble away, and let this wretched episode finally end.
Simon
Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
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