The Independent

Why the PM keeps sticking with unloved Williamson

- SEAN O'GRADY

Somewhat overshadow­ed by the dramatic slump in the prime minister’s approval ratings among Conservati­ve Party activists earlier this week is the continuing disappoint­ing showing for the education secretary, Gavin Williamson. Much has been made of

the “swing” in Boris Johnson’s net approval ratings, down about 40 per cent to 2.4 per cent, thanks to his hypocrisy over selfisolat­ion, by-election results and a lack of direction in his government.

Even more remarkable has been the decline in the popularity of Williamson. In June last year, before the exams fiasco, Williamson was on 42.8 per cent, well up with the pack. Soon, after all the U-turns over grades and university entrance he went far into the red, and has stayed there ever since, running at a depressing minus 44.1 per cent in the latest survey. He is thus bottom of the Conservati­ve Home league table of cabinet ministers, and if he were a school he’d be liable for special measures.

Having been sacked by Theresa May as defence secretary in a dispute about the leaking of details of a National Security Council meeting, Williamson was rewarded with a second chance in cabinet after he helped run Boris Johnson’s leadership campaign (and played a role in the resignatio­n of May). It’s fair to say that, for whatever reason, he’s not been able to make the best of it. The latest report from the Institute for Government (IFG), an independen­t think tank, makes for uncomforta­ble reading for any remaining fans of Williamson.

Williamson is capable of treachery and has stabbed previous leaders in the back with no compunctio­n

The IFG concludes: “Its most important conclusion is that the most unforgivab­le aspect of what happened is not just the failure

to make contingenc­y plans in the summer of 2020 but the refusal to do so – when it was already obvious that fresh school closures might well be needed, and that exams might have to be cancelled again. Lessons were not learnt from the first lockdown, with the result that, for both school closures and exams, the story from July 2020 to January 2021 was a case of ‘pause, rewind, repeat’.” Even with his, paradoxica­lly, populist push to get Latin back into state schools, things look bleak for Williamson. But nil desperandu­m, Gavin!

Williamson’s problems leave Johnson with a bit of a Williamson problem. Usually it would be simple to drop Williamson, because he’s performed poorly, or is perceived to have, and, as is apparent from the Conservati­ve Home survey, there would be few grumbling from the grassroots. Only Matt Hancock and their hapless failed candidate in the Chesham and Amersham by-election are less popular among the stout men and women defending British Conservati­sm right now.

Yet Williamson has a reputation. As chief whip he was adept in the darker arts of party management, and he has been influentia­l in the parliament­ary party during the last two contests, carefully choreograp­hing the voting of the MPs to ensure that Johnson ended up facing Jeremy Hunt in the last round and the members’ ballot, the preferred outcome given that Michael Gove or Dominic Raab might have threatened the thumping victory Johnson sought. Williamson might also plead that much of the chaos about the schools – exams, closures, testing – in fact emanated from No 10 and the crazy world of Johnson and Dominic Cummings. As someone who has observed Johnson at closer quarters than most, he might, if fired, choose to echo Cummings’s criticism of the prime minister’s suitabilit­y for high office. Williamson is, in fact, perfectly capable of treachery, and has stabbed previous leaders in the back with no compunctio­n, and would happily make it a hat-trick. Et tu, Gavin?

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 ?? (AFP) ?? Johnson and his be l eaguered education secretary l eave No 10
(AFP) Johnson and his be l eaguered education secretary l eave No 10

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