The Independent

PM nominates Grayling to chair key security group

- ANDREW WOODCOCK POLITICAL EDITOR

Former cabinet minister Chris Grayling – renowned for a string of mishaps at the transport and justice department­s – looks set to become chair of Westminste­r’s influentia­l Intelligen­ce and Security Committee, after Boris Johnson included his name on the list of nominees.

The first challenge for the new chair will be to decide when – and if – to release the long-awaited report into alleged Russian interferen­ce in UK politics, which the prime minister has been accused of delaying to ensure it was not published ahead of last year’s general election.

Mr Johnson’s failure to ensure that the 50-page dossier presented to him last October was cleared for release before the December poll has sparked speculatio­n that it contains embarrassi­ng details of Moscow’s attempts to gain influence within the Conservati­ve Party and to further the Brexit cause.

Also included on the list of nominees to the ISC are Tory former ministers Theresa Villiers and Sir John Hayes and senior Conservati­ve backbenche­rs Julian Lewis and Mark Pritchard, as well as Labour’s Kevan Jones and Diana Johnson and the SNP’s Stewart Hosie. They will be joined by a list of peers nominated to the joint committee, which scrutinise­s the UK’s intelligen­ce and security agencies MI5, MI6 and GCHQ.

The Commons will vote to approve the list next Monday, followed by the House of Lords on Tuesday. Once approved, the committee members will choose a chair, but it is understood that the Conservati­ve majority will be whipped to back Mr Grayling, making his selection all but certain.

Unusually, the ISC has not sat in the seven months since the election, as No 10 repeatedly failed to approve a list of MPs for membership. Unlike other Westminste­r committees, the ISC reports not to parliament but to the prime minister, who must clear its reports for publicatio­n.

Mr Johnson has already given the Russia report the green light for release, but it could not be made public so long as the committee was not sitting. The PM’s spokespers­on said Mr Johnson would encourage the new committee to publish “as soon as possible”.

The report was completed in March last year and submitted to the prime minister last October after completing the process for clearance on security grounds.

Former ISC chair Dominic Grieve appealed last year for Mr Johnson to clear it for publicatio­n ahead of the election, saying it contained knowledge which would be “germane” to voters deciding who to back.

But the PM’s approval came after the dissolutio­n of parliament, at which point the committee formally ceased to exist and could therefore not press ahead with publicatio­n.

It is understood that the report examines allegation­s that Russian money has flowed into British politics in general and to the Conservati­ve party in particular. It also includes claims that Russia launched a major influence operation in 2016 in support of Brexit.

Asked whether the long-awaited document could now see the light of day before parliament breaks up for the summer recess later this month, Mr Johnson’s spokespers­on said: “The publicatio­n will be a matter for the new committee but we will encourage them to publish it as soon as possible.”

Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse, who earlier this month tabled a parliament­ary motion demanding the urgent reinstatem­ent of the ISC so that it could publish the report, said: “I am glad the committee is due to be restored. However, it should never have needed this fight. The prime minister has a lot to do to claw back public confidence.

“At the top of the list for the intelligen­ce committee must be forcing the government to publish the report into Russian interferen­ce of our democracy, and before the summer recess so MPs can scrutinise it.

“A failure to do so would damage the UK’s standing in the world and continue to raise further questions about the Conservati­ve Party’s deep connection­s to Russian oligarchs.”

 ??  ?? Ex-minister could head the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee (Reuters)
Ex-minister could head the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee (Reuters)

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