Uk politics

The Home Office is Whitehall’s ultimate hostile environment

From our UK edition

Theresa May's tragicomic run of rotten luck continues. Amber Rudd has self-deported to the backbenches and the Prime Minister will have to find a credible replacement at a moment of acute strife. Why anyone would want the job is a mystery to most of us, but then we lack that combination of ambition and self-delusion essential to political life. The Home Office is where potential is thrown on the rack and brutalised, where careers go to die slow, ignominious deaths; it is Whitehall's ultimate hostile environment. (Ministers disagree and began speculating about a Rudd return with unseemly haste. They may be right but they could at least feign a bout of reflection and contrition.) Home Secretaries enter the office with one of two mindsets.

Tory MP points the finger of blame at May

From our UK edition

When Nick Boles tweeted in January to complain about the 'timidity and lack of ambition' in Theresa May's government, the Conservative MP kickstarted a mini-revolt which saw the party come close to turning on May. So, it doesn't bode well for May that Boles appears to level some of the blame for Amber Rudd's departure with one Theresa May. The Conservative MP – and close Michael Gove ally – has taken to social media to share some 'wise words' from Julian McCrae of the Institute for Government. And  these wise words are? 'Make sure Secretary of State has experienced junior ministers supporting her (don’t change immigration minister in Jul 16, Jun 17, Jan 18 as Theresa May did).' https://twitter.

Who will replace Amber Rudd?

From our UK edition

With Amber Rudd gone, talk has turned to who will replace her as Home Secretary. Downing Street has suggested that hacks should be on standby for an announcement later today. However, choosing a successor will be no easy task. The bookies' favourite is Michael Gove, the government's resident eco-warrior who currently resides at Defra. However, this seems unlikely for two reasons. Firstly, up until now, May has always worked to preserve the Remain/Leave balance of her Cabinet. It follows that she'd ideally want to replace Rudd with a fellow Remainer. To upset the balance so close to crunch talks on the customs union would be a bold move. Secondly, Gove sits on a different end of the spectrum to May when it comes to immigration.

With Amber Rudd gone, the Windrush scandal moves closer to Theresa May

From our UK edition

Alastair Campbell denies that he ever said that no Cabinet Minister can survive a negative story lasting ten, eleven or 14 days. But even if he didn’t say it, it is not a bad rule and one that Amber Rudd has fallen foul of. Rudd’s resignation is a result of the fact that more and more keeps coming on this story, and she is now faced with admitting that she either deliberately misled parliament or really didn’t know what was going on. She has gone before Monday’s statement in the Commons which would have been an exceptionally difficult moment for her. At some point, there is only so much a senior minister can take before there position becomes untenable, as I say in the podcast (click below). Her departure causes multiple problems for Theresa May.

Will Amber Rudd now join Anna Soubry in the Brexit awkward squad?

From our UK edition

To the disappointment of Conservative MPs and the delight of Labour politicians, Amber Rudd has resigned as Home Secretary - but the best politicians can always clutch victory from the jaws of defeat. Or at least that appears to be what Anna Soubry is trying to do. The arch-Remainer has taken to social media to lament Rudd's passing – praising her 'great courage and immense ability'. Soubry goes on to add that she will give her a 'huge welcome on to our back benches': https://twitter.com/Anna_Soubry/status/990699828182216704 Rudd, of course, pretty much led the Remain campaign by the end and acquitted herself with distinction during the debates. So there's no doubt where her sympathies lie.

What does the French white van man think about Brexit?

From our UK edition

I am living in Paris in the unofficial role of Diplomatic Wag. Though since I am neither wife nor girlfriend, but fiancée, or, in best Franglais, la vielle balle et chaîne, I have been searching for a new acronym. Foho (Foreign Office Hanger On)? Andy is a ‘Directeur de SIN’, a demonic job description out of C.S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters. SIN is the government’s Science and Innovation Network, promoting collaboration between international scientists. There is goodwill in laboratories on both sides of the Channel to go on working together post-You-Know-What. Brexit is pronounced to rhyme with Brigitte, as in Bardot. Parisians ask if you’re American or English and when you say English they bring up Brexitte.

New leak suggests Amber Rudd’s grip on the Home Office is even weaker than first thought

From our UK edition

When the Windrush scandal broke, it was largely seen as Theresa May's fault, given the Prime Minister had introduced the hostile environment policy when she was Home Secretary. But this week, the focus has shifted to Amber Rudd, and whether she knew what was going on once she took over the role. This afternoon the Guardian has a leak which suggests Rudd's grip on her department is even weaker than we'd previously thought. Following a chaotic 24 hours in which the Home Secretary told MPs on the Home Affairs Committee that there were no Home Office targets for immigration removals and then corrected herself in the Commons the following day, the newspaper has now published a secret memo which suggests Rudd was wrong to say she did not know about these targets.

Red Ken hints at a comeback

From our UK edition

Ken Livingstone could soon find himself booted out of Labour for good if the party ever gets its act together to deal with his suspension. So it Ken sorry? Not a bit. The former mayor of London told LBC this morning that the anti-Semitism row was a ‘complete diversion’ and insisted it wouldn't damage the party on May 3rd. What's more, despite still being suspended, Ken is representing Labour on the doorstep – by campaigning in his local constituency. Still, at least Ken has said he does have some regrets – but Mr S was surprised to hear these didn't relate to his comments about Hitler.

What Westminster eats for lunch

From our UK edition

Dominic Raab has found himself the subject of much mockery today after one of his aides allegedly told an undercover reporter about his rather repetitious lunch habits: ‘He has the chicken Caesar and bacon baguette, superfruit pot and the vitamin volcano smoothie, every day. He is so weird. It’s the Dom Raab Special.’ Happily, Mr S's mole reports that he has not been put off – he was spotted back in Pret this lunchtime. Still, just so he is not alone – Mr S has reached out to MPs, ministers, SpAds and staffers to discover the eating habits of Westminster's big beasts: Sadiq Khan: The Mayor of London varies his lunches – in part because he is so often our about – but he always tries to have a fruit salad.

Gavin Williamson’s PR blitz

From our UK edition

Today's Sun reports that Cabinet ‘big beasts’ – Michael Gove, Amber Rudd and Gavin Williamson – are amassing 'huge war chests' as they line up leadership bids. Williamson is on £10,000 – behind both Rudd and Gove. Still, the ambitious Defence Secretary is making sure he is not outdone on other fronts. Williamson is down to give a 'wide-ranging' speech at next week's Institute of Economic Affairs bash – and then the following week will be a star guest at the Conservative Progress conference – an event stuffed with Tory activists. Well, with Gove lined up to advise not one, but three new Tory think tanks, Williamson still has work to do...

Dominic Raab’s lunch scandal

From our UK edition

Dominic Raab has awoken to a scandal relating to his team. The Daily Mirror reports that one of the Housing Minister's staff has been 'selling sex to sugar daddies'. While the paper refrains from identifying the staffer in question, it does publish their account of life working under Raab – and this is where the real scandal emerges. The woman in question has revealed Raab's lunch order: 'He has the chicken Caesar and bacon baguette, superfruit pot and the vitamin volcano smoothie, every day. He is so weird. It’s the Dom Raab Special.' Well, at least it's a more down to earth option than daily visits to Roux...

The Facebook scandal exposes our politicians’ technical illiteracy

From our UK edition

Imagine a world in which all politicians were computer scientists. What a dreary dystopia that would be. It’s hard to think of anything worse than a nation ruled by people with PhDs in machine learning.   That said, politicians do need to know something about the digital world. It’s no longer good enough for our elected representatives to feign technical illiteracy, throw up their arms in defeat, and ask the office twenty-something to fix it. Every professional thinks politicians are clueless about their particular area of expertise – doctors complain that MPs are medically illiterate, teachers moan that they don't get pedagogy and so on.

Nicola Sturgeon’s response to Brexit has utterly failed

From our UK edition

What's Nicola Sturgeon playing at on Brexit? Quick answer: politics. Longer answer: politics.  The SNP leader has rejected a deal to resolve the impasse between Westminster and Holyrood over the repatriation of powers from Brussels. She accuses the Tories of a 'power grab' because some areas of responsibility will initially go to the UK rather than Scottish parliament and threatens to deny consent to the government's Brexit Bill. If she does so – and her SNP holds a majority of seats at Holyrood with unofficial junior coalition partners, the Greens – it will fix a procedural wheel clamp on Brexit. At which point, the only way the Bill could go ahead is if Westminster explicitly overruled the Scottish Parliament.  You see where I'm going with this?

Amber Rudd is reminded of the Home Office’s reputation as a political graveyard

From our UK edition

Amber Rudd must, privately, be hopping mad about the Windrush row. Not only is she having to defend policies that her predecessor and now boss introduced when she was Home Secretary, she is also having to try to resolve the mess that was exacerbated by Number 10 in initially refusing a meeting with Commonwealth leaders about the matter, and then made worse still by Caroline Nokes' interview suggesting that people had been wrongly deported when there was no such evidence of this happening. That's not to say that Rudd doesn't have her own questions to answer: as she argued herself this afternoon when before the Home Affairs Committee, while the principle of the hostile environment immigration policy may well be right, the practice has been wrong. Her session was not a comfortable one.

The Maybot returns at PMQs

From our UK edition

Today's Prime Minister's Questions saw the Maybot reactivated. Jeremy Corbyn decided to lead the session on the fallout from the Windrush row, widening out his questions to the flaws in the hostile environment policy on illegal immigration, and on who was to blame for these flaws being apparent but not fixed for so long. The exchanges very swiftly became a ding-dong between May and Corbyn as to whose fault the creation of a hostile environment policy actually was. Corbyn wanted to pin the policy on May, but also demanded that Amber Rudd resign for aiming to harden the policy. His questions were decent, but it was May herself who created the Labour win today, as her answers were terrible.

David Davis tries to calm fears over a customs union reversal

From our UK edition

For those Brexiteers worried the government may change its mind on leaving the customs union, David Davis’s appearance in front of a select committee gave reasons for reassurance – but also possibly some cause to worry. The Brexit secretary was clear that he is sticking firmly to his guns on the issue. But can he – and the government – continue to do so under pressure from MPs who are seeking to keep Britain inside the customs union? Hilary Benn asked Davis what would happen if the vote in Parliament on the Brexit trade bill went against the government.

Jeremy Corbyn’s ‘positive and constructive’ anti-Semitism meeting

From our UK edition

Oh dear. On Tuesday evening, Jeremy Corbyn met with Jewish leaders to discuss his party's anti-Semitism problem. The meeting didn't sound as though it would be the most harmonious affair what with the Labour leader accused of not taking the concerns of the Jewish community seriously – and his decision to meet with the 'radical' fringe group Jewdas first. So, there was much relief when Corbyn issued a post-meeting statement heralding a 'positive and constructive' meeting: 'We will continue to engage and work with Jewish community organisations to deal with this issue. Our party will not fail our Jewish brothers and sisters.' Only, it seems the Jewish representatives at the meeting don't agree.

May and Boris in Cabinet clash over immigration amnesty

From our UK edition

At Cabinet today, ministers discussed the fallout from the Windrush scandal. I understand that Boris Johnson made the point that there needed to be a broader immigration amnesty for long-standing Commonwealth immigrants. He argued that this was necessary to prevent others from getting caught up in the same situation, having to produce overly onerous amounts of evidence to show that they have been living here for years. Obviously, this amnesty wouldn’t apply to those with a criminal record. I’m told that Theresa May then rather acidly remarked that Boris had previously called for an amnesty for all immigrants, which he did first in 2008 and then again in 2016 when he privately proposed one for those who had been here for over a decade.