Business Day

Sunak keeps options open on home secretary’s future

- Kitty Donaldson

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has suggested he will seek answers after a newspaper report that home secretary Suella Braverman sought public servants’ help to deal with the fallout from a speeding ticket in 2022.

Speaking at the Group of 7 (G7) summit in Japan, Sunak kept his options open on Braverman’s political future. “I don’t know the full details of what’s happened, nor I have I spoken to the home secretary,” the premier said when asked if he still backed her.

A Downing Street spokespers­on later said Sunak still had confidence in Braverman.

The opposition party on Saturday urged Sunak to ask the UK’s ethics adviser to open a review of Braverman’s actions. Ministers are barred from using public servants to help with their personal affairs. Braverman oversees law enforcemen­t and is a prominent figure among the ruling Conservati­ve Party’s populist right.

“Ms Braverman accepts that she was speeding last summer and regrets doing so,” a spokespers­on for the home secretary said. “She took the three points and paid the fine last year.”

In September, Braverman asked public servants to help her arrange a one-on-one drivingawa­reness course to avoid a speeding fine and points on her licence, the Sunday Times reported. In-person courses usually require drivers to participat­e with other motorists while online ones would require their names and faces to be visible.

When public servants refused to help, Braverman turned to a political aide to secure special arrangemen­ts with a course provider, the paper said. She ultimately decided to take the points and pay the fine after the aide’s efforts were unsuccessf­ul.

Labour home affairs spokespers­on Yvette Cooper said Sunak should refer Braverman to his independen­t ethics adviser, Laurie Magnus, for review. “The prime minister has promised integrity, profession­alism and accountabi­lity, yet it appears his home secretary is blatantly flouting all three,” Cooper said. “We need an urgent investigat­ion into what has gone on here, starting with Laurie Magnus seeing how this is possibly compatible with the ministeria­l code.”

The incident has come to light at a time when Braverman is at the centre of a fraught Tory debate over surging levels of immigratio­n, which her office oversees. Earlier this week, she called for reducing arrivals into the country in a speech to a Conservati­ve Party gathering that was widely seen as an effort to present herself as a potential Sunak successor.

The events detailed in the Sunday Times report took place shortly after Braverman was appointed as home secretary by Sunak’s short-tenured predecesso­r, Liz Truss. She was fired by Truss in October for breaching ministeria­l rules by sending an official document from her personal email to a fellow MP.

Sunak reappointe­d her just six days in one of his first acts as prime minister.

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Suella Braverman

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