The Mail on Sunday

Can Mrs May’s sword of truth beat the fake news flame- throwers?

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THERESA MAY is going to regret the day she sacked Damian Green. Not because it weakens her politicall­y – she is ending the year in a much stronger position than seemed possible even a month ago. Nor because she has lost a close political ally – she and Green were Oxford contempora­ries, but the strength of their friendship has been overplayed.

What will haunt her – in the shape of a tall, slightly stooped and balding Banquo – is her decision to make the puritanica­l edicts of the Ministeria­l Code the inviolate benchmark of probity within her government. And the slow realisatio­n that she has opted to march into battle with her trusty sword of truth against opponents wielding populist, posttruth flame-throwers.

The Prime Minister is an anachronis­m. When the history books of her premiershi­p are written, they will show she was a good woman, in the right place, at the wrong time.

It is part of her appeal – she reminds people of a golden ( if mythical) age when integrity and humility were the glue binding the British body politic. But last week she made a significan­t – if heroic – blunder. It was not dissimilar to the one made by John Major when he decided to l ecture the British people: ‘We must go back to basics and the Conservati­ve Party will lead the country back to those basics right across the board.’

Speak to the Prime Minister’s allies and they will tell you she had to axe Green. ‘ Imagine if she’d stuck with him after two independen­t assessment­s had found he’d breached the code by lying,’ says a No 10 source.

YOU can certainly imagine it. Accusation­s of a cover- up; of May putting loyalty to a personal friend over the duties of her office. In other words, the very same accusation­s she has faced from Kate Maltby and her supporters anyway.

It would certainly have been hard to keep Green, but not impossible. She could just have told Parliament and the public the truth. The allegation­s of harassment were not proven. The allegation­s of watching pornograph­y were not proven, and motivated by a police vendetta. The statement that he had not been made aware of the presence of pornograph­y by the officers who raided his office and his home was technicall­y correct – his lawyer had been told, and subsequent­ly informed Green at a later date.

But instead she chose to stick to both the letter and spirit of the code. The breach was not material, but it was real. And therefore he had to go. But now a line has been drawn it cannot be undrawn. Every erroneous statement, every indiscreti­on, every scandal – genuine or confected – must now be held to same standard. And interprete­d literally, it is an unforgivin­g one.

The Ministeria­l Code is underpinne­d by the commanding ‘Seven Principles of Public Life’. Selflessne­ss, Integrity, Objectivit­y, Accountabi­lity, Openness, Honesty, Leadership. In the post-Green era, how many of Mrs May’s existing Cabinet will be seen to reach this exalted ethical threshold?

Will Boris Johnson live up to the code’s stricture that ‘holders of public office should act solely in terms of the public interest’? Does Michael Gove intend to respect the rule that ‘holders of public office must act and take decisions impartiall­y, fairly and on merit, using the best evidence’? Do David Davis’s contortion­s over the Brexit impact assessment­s presage a commitment to ensuring ‘holders of public office should act and take decisions in an open and transparen­t manner’?

Ever since taking office, the Prime Minister has made bridging the chasm between the political class and those they serve a priority. But with the Green ruling, she is effectivel­y asking her Ministers to make that crossing on a tightrope, in a thundersto­rm, while sporting a blindfold.

When I worked in Parliament, the game was to bend the truth to your will. Facts were moulded and shaped and then deployed in a partial way to support a favoured political narrative.

But that narrative still had to be anchored, however precarious­ly, in reality. It’s how the infamous ‘dodgy dossier’ survived the scrutiny of a public inquiry.

But in the age of the New Populism, facts are surplus to requiremen­ts. The political imperative is to identify which lie will resonate with the largest portion of the electorate, then keep repeating it until the truth begs for mercy.

Mrs May clearly believes being seen to place honesty and integrity at the heart of her strategy is the way to repel the populist tyrants.

And maybe she’s right. But to date there’s precious little evidence of it.

The biggest threats facing the PM in 2018 come from opposing flanks – the Corbynite cultists and the kamikaze Brexiteers. Both movements have been behind the two most spectacula­rly successful lies in modern British political history.

Jeremy Corbyn’s stated desire to usher in an era of ‘kinder, gentler politics’ was a claim so breathtaki­ng in its cynicism and mendacity it managed to pull the wool over the eyes of 40 per cent of the electorate. Leave.EU’s ‘Breaking Point’ poster directly mirrored Nazi propaganda – and secured the endorsemen­t of 17 million voters.

May’s allies say she is unapologet­ic about holding her Ministers to the highest of public standards. But in the fake news era, I fear she is about to find she is holding them to an unreasonab­le standard.

There is now no such thing as an absolute political truth. Veracity is a base struggle for survival of the fittest. And by binding her hands with the Ministeria­l Code, Mrs May continues that fight at a serious disadvanta­ge.

Green has made mistakes, but there are far worse people serving in politics than him – as the Prime Minister will realise to her cost.

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