Gulf Today

Covid curse returns just when the ship had to be steadied

- Andrew Grice,

They used to say in Conservati­ve circles that Boris Johnson was a lucky general. Lucky to have Theresa May and then Jeremy Corbyn as his opponents. Lucky to have good lieutenant­s like Dominic Cummings, who “made” Johnson at the 2016 EU referendum and last December’s general election.

History will now judge Cummings in a more nuanced way ater his dramatic exit from Downing Street. And Johnson’s luck has definitely run out. Coronaviru­s would have tested any government and prime minister to the limits; former holders of his job thank God it didn’t happen on their watch. It almost claimed Johnson’s life.

Now the curse of COVID-19 has struck again: he must self-isolate in his flat above 11 Downing Street for another 10 days ater Tory MP Lee Anderson, who atended a meeting at No 10 last Thursday, tested positive.

To describe this as bad timing is an understate­ment; it really is the last thing Johnson needed. He had intended to be highly active and visible during what was already going to be a busy two-week period, even before last week’s psychodram­a. The departure of Cummings and his sidekick Lee Cain means Johnson needs to steady the ship, move on and show that this much-trumpeted “reset” is more than just another unfulfille­d headline. Johnson’s incarcerat­ion will bring annoying logistical headaches, making it harder to communicat­e with his aides and ministers when everything must be done by Zoom or phone. His most important decision-making meetings will be with Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, about the government-wide spending review to be unveiled on 25 November.

Johnson insisted he will have “plenty more to say by Zoom and other means of electronic communicat­ion” during his isolation, but his ability to do that will be curtailed. A long-planned speech unveiling a 10-point plan for a “green industrial revolution” is due on Wednesday.

Focusing on climate change is one way Johnson intends to soten the harsh face of his administra­tion in the post-cummings era. He hopes it is also his route to a decent working relationsh­ip with the president-elect Joe Biden.

Johnson allies are irritated by suggestion­s from the Vote Leave gang that he will lose his focus on “levelling up” the poorest regions without them at his side. He is due to meet Tory MPS from the Northern Research Group to reassure them their red-turned-blue-wall seats are at the top of his agenda.

Johnson will likely continue to chair daily meetings about the coronaviru­s. He will begin work on the restrictio­ns that will apply in England when its lockdown ends on 2 December. The PM is increasing­ly bullish about a return to a local and regional system, though it could be a tougher one than existed before the lockdown. Johnson will also have to say something about the sensitive issue of Christmas.

Johnson’s other preoccupat­ion will be negotiatio­ns on an EU trade deal, which resume in Brussels. This will not be greatly affected by his isolation. He will keep in close touch with David Frost, his chief negotiator, and, if necessary, “meet” Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, with whom his recent talks have been via video link. Johnson will soon have to decide whether to make concession­s to get a deal over the line. But he might not want to do that so quickly ater Cummings’s exit, which would risk cries of “betrayal” from hardline Brexiteers.

Johnson, of course, is making a point he is sticking to the rules. His need to be above suspicion is an unfortunat­e reminder that Cummings did not stick to them during his disastrous trip to County Durham. And a reminder that moving on from the Cummings era will be easier said than done.

 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May
 ??  ?? Ursula von der Leyen
Ursula von der Leyen

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