The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on textocracy: bring politics back into the open

- Editorial

The pandemic has driven much activity that used to be conducted in public view into private spaces. Politics is no exception. Covid safety regulation­s prevent MPs packing the Commons, diminishin­g the chamber’s power to hold ministers to account. In its early stages, the emergency required some suspension of partisansh­ip. Politics was reduced to the spectacle of the prime minister, flanked by scientific advisers, dispensing instructio­ns on television. The early scramble to fight the virus also apparently required the abandonmen­t of some Whitehall procuremen­t protocol. Vital equipment was needed at short notice. That is the context in which Boris Johnson assured Sir James Dyson that certain tax liabilitie­s could be waived if the inventor’s staff relocated from Singapore to produce hospital ventilator­s in the UK. The guarantee was made in an exchange of private text messages that only become public this week.

The prime minister has defended his action on the grounds that he was “moving heaven and earth” to procure life-saving equipment. That dodges the issue of whether access to the PM’s phone number should be the basis for deciding how the rules apply, and to whom. Other deserving suppliers had no such privileges.

The defence of expediency might be valid in some circumstan­ces, but it has been used elasticall­y – stretched to cover every decision where corners were cut and contracts awarded to those with personal connection to senior Tories. Distinguis­hing between necessary short cuts and maladminis­tration is one reason why a thorough inquiry into the government’s handling of the pandemic is needed. There is a limit to the degree of transparen­cy achievable via the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, especially with an uncooperat­ive regime.

Mr Johnson has forfeited the benefit of the doubt through his record of disregardi­ng convention­s underpinni­ng British democracy. Trust is also in short supply when his party is mired in a lobbying scandal. David Cameron has said that his work on behalf of the financier Lex Greensill should have been done “only through the most formal of channels”, but his value as a lobbyist included access to informal channels. He had the phone numbers of cabinet ministers and the status, as a former prime minister, that required a reply. The unminuted chat is hardly an innovation in government. But it is a way of doing business that flourishes in the climate created by the pandemic, when so much of politics has retreated out of view, and when the urgency of a crisis is used to deflect difficult questions. Meanwhile, Downing Street has abandoned plans for regular televised press briefings. Having constructe­d a media suite at a cost of £2.6m, the government is fleeing its own purposebui­lt public arena for scrutiny.

As the country emerges from lockdown, politics no longer needs to be conducted in a state of emergency. But those conditions, combining extraordin­ary powers and minimal transparen­cy, have suited a government that likes to conduct business between chums, away from the light. Among the

many tasks of post-pandemic reconstruc­tion will be flushing politics back into the open, restoring norms of democratic propriety and breaking the prime minister’s habit of shirking accountabi­lity.

 ?? Composite: UK Parliament ?? Text exchanges between Prime Minister Boris Johnson and businessma­n Sir James Dyson have recently come to light.
Composite: UK Parliament Text exchanges between Prime Minister Boris Johnson and businessma­n Sir James Dyson have recently come to light.

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