Sunak keeps options open on home secretary’s future
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.