UK’s Johnson is fighting two big political fires

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is fighting (at least) two big political fires. They may not substantially impact the Conservative Party’s fortunes at the May 6 local elections, but these blazes suck oxygen from policy making, undermine public trust and distract from attempts to rebuild and rebalance the British economy as it emerges from the pandemic. What’s worse, the harm to the Tories is self-inflicted.
Last week several newspapers reported that Johnson blamed Dominic Cummings, his former top adviser, for a series of damaging leaks. The once all-powerful aide hit back in a blistering blog post, accusing the UK leader of falling “below the standards of competence and integrity the country deserves.” If Johnson was trying to deflect attention from the sleaze storm engulfing his government, the attempt backfired spectacularly. In his blog diatribe, Cummings claimed that Johnson sought to have donors pay secretly for an expensive refurbishment of his Downing Street apartment. Trade Secretary Liz Truss was sent out on Sunday to defend the prime minister, but she dodged the question of who covered the initial bill and why.
Cummings clearly has more to get off his chest about leaks, Johnson’s reluctance to lock down the UK economy and more. An all-out Cummings versus Johnson fight would be bloody. And the timing couldn’t be worse given the much more serious cronyism scandal around Greensill Capital, a supply-chain financing firm that imploded spectacularly.
In many ways it’s the greater conflagration. Here, too, there are questions of money, personal gain and how government decisions are made. Only in this case there’s
taxpayer money on the line
and broader questions of government propriety at a time when the Conservatives are also facing charges of cronyism in pandemic procurement.
Last week the government published a trove of correspondence from the Treasury and the Bank of England involving Lex Greensill, founder of the eponymous firm. The correspondence demonstrates Greensill’s backstage pass to Britain’s corridors of power; and how relentlessly he lobbied senior officials to try to access government-supported loan facilities at the height of the pandemic last year.
For example, on March 15, 2020 (a Sunday) Greensill fired off a terse email to the Bank of England’s deputy governor, Jon Cunliffe. “I understand the meeting we had scheduled for Monday has been moved,” he wrote.
“The disruption to supply chains and the financing of them is real. In the last week we have seen a great many fixed-income investors who support the asset class step back — meaning liquidity could well become a major issue in the coming days.” Greensill wanted a meeting ASAP.
The time stamp on the reply from Cunliffe — copying former Prime Minister David Cameron, who worked for Greensill — was less than 45 minutes later. “We will set something up for tomorrow.” The next day Greensill sent a longer letter making his pitch ahead of a call with BOE officials.

—Bloomberg

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