The Scottish Mail on Sunday

I asked Boris if he thought Michael Gove was leaking... Do bears s*** in the woods? he replied

-

MICHAEL Gove and I had many rows when I worked for him in the Department for Education. Most of them ended with him reminding me he was the boss.

But at least he was in his radical phase – before he became a champion of net zero and antigrowth policies – and we agreed on the fundamenta­ls of education policy. So when David Cameron resigned as Prime Minister after the Brexit referendum in June 2016, I called Gove to tell him I thought he should run.

He immediatel­y declined, saying he was backing Boris and I should join his campaign.

I didn’t know Boris well. But after a friendly meeting with him, I announced my support in an article that was published on the morning he formally launched his campaign.

Early that same morning, however, I received a phone call from Gove. ‘Liz, you need to sit down for what I’m about to say,’ he told me. ‘I’ve decided to run.’ My initial reaction was incredulit­y. What on earth was he talking about? On the very morning of the campaign launch, he was asking:

‘Will you back me?’ I muttered something about needing to think about it and hung up.

I was honestly devastated. Having initially favoured Gove, I’d been entirely persuaded that he and Boris would be a winning combinatio­n – the fixer and the showman. Yet, as we all know, Boris withdrew from the contest at his planned launch event.

That afternoon, Gove called me again, still seeking my support. By this time, my shock had given way to anger. I told him bluntly I couldn’t back him.

Whatever regard I’d previously had for him, I felt the way

I felt the way he had stabbed Boris in the back was unforgivab­le

he’d stabbed Boris in the back was unforgivab­le. I simply didn’t understand how someone could do that. I then received a call from Home Secretary Theresa May, keen to sign me up to her campaign. I’d found her difficult to deal with in the past, but I was prepared to give her the benefit of the doubt.

Later, when Theresa bowed out as PM, another leadership race kicked off. Among the flood of phone calls from candidates

my support was one from … Gove. There was no way, however, that I was going to support him after his betrayal of Boris last time round. I’d also since grown appalled by Gove’s manoeuvrin­g to thwart a hard Brexit.

Both he and his close ally Dominic Cummings worried that the EU could cause us major pain. So they wanted to focus on simply rolling over existing EU trade deals, and played down the possibilit­y of new agreements with other major trading partners. When I wanted to do a trade deal with Australia, the antigrowth­ers put forward ludicrous arguments about the Australian­s having low standards in animal welfare – and there were many leaks on this topic.

One day, I got a call from Boris, who asked me if I’d leaked something. I told him it had been Michael Gove – and what did he expect, given that Gove was a serial offender? I pressed him: did he think Gove had been leaking? Boris replied: ‘Do bears s*** in the woods?’

Even at the last minute, in a Cabinet sub-committee, Gove tried to stop the Australia deal going ahead. But Boris had the last word. Who had been on our side over the years, he asked? Who had fought alongside us to defend freedom?

After what Australia had done for us at Gallipoli, he concluded, we should do the deal.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? BETRAYAL: Truss was appalled by Michael Gove’s manoeuvrin­g
BETRAYAL: Truss was appalled by Michael Gove’s manoeuvrin­g

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom