The Independent

Why Dorries and Dowden have been awarded top jobs

- SEAN O'GRADY

As a practical result of the cabinet reshuffle, Britain will soon have to get much more used to the voices of two previously relatively low-key politician­s – the former secretary of state for

culture, media and sport, Oliver Dowden, and his surprising successor, Nadine Dorries, whose announceme­nt was an unusually well-kept secret in this notoriousl­y leaky administra­tion. They highlight two important aspects of what Boris Johnson is up to.

First, then, Nadine Dorries. She has always been an extreme Boris loyalist, and that’s a quality he values (though doesn’t always reciprocat­e). She’s a former nurse, writes historical novels set in Britain’s near past of Heartbeat, Call the Midwife and a post office in every village, and was a health minister during the pandemic, and mostly managed not to disgrace herself. More than anything, though, she is a dedicated and sincere populist-nationalis­t of a kind and to a fanaticism that is still relatively rare even in today’s purged Conservati­ve party. In particular, she is a sworn enemy of the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n and all it stands for (or at least all that its enemies on the right imagine it stands for). Her role will be to terrorise the corporatio­n into a state of subjugatio­n, and it’s precisely her unreasonin­g demeanour that makes her so well-suited to the task at hand. There is, in other words, no point trying to argue with her. It suits Johnson well to allow such a figure to rough up the corporatio­n while he remains relatively aloof from the unpleasant­ness and maintains useful and friendly relations with Laura Kuenssberg. If Dorries goes too far one day then the PM can be quietly distanced from the gaffe or unpleasant­ness.

Dorries second objective, again deploying her unique gift for twisted logic and the deduction of a kamikaze pilot, will be to insert Paul Dacre, former editor of the Daily Mail, to head up the media regulator Ofcom, and thus a chilling effect on the entire media landscape, rather as his critics say he did in the Mail newsroom. Dowden, for whatever reason, didn’t succeed in getting Dacre done, so to speak, and spawned into Ofcom; and so Johnson has, so to speak, called the midwife. Her forceps are ready. The public should be ready to see much more of her forceful personalit­y, one that Johnson must hope will be almost perfect for the prejudices of the former red wall.

Which brings us to the more emollient sounding Dowden, cochair of the Conservati­ve Party. He’ll be looking after the political side of things, while his co-chair Ben Elliot keeps on with the untidy business of fundraisin­g. Traditiona­lly, the Tory chairman in the first half of a parliament was supposed to clear up after a general election and concentrat­e on internal party affairs, such as membership and campaignin­g. Then there’s a swap to a chair with a more public-facing, all-purpose presentati­onal role – articulate, deeply partisan, getting the message across. Hence Dowden – a former PR man, he learned the smooth arts of politics as deputy chief of staff to David Cameron, a typical graduate of the Cameron-Osborne era. His past (also a Remainer, predictabl­y) doesn’t seem to have done him any harm. As the “minister for the Today programme”, he will be the go-to spokespers­on ready to explain how the prime minister's words have been taken out of context, or explain patiently what the new justice secretary really meant to say about taking the knee, or, indeed, what point Dorries was really trying to make during a meeting with BBC bosses. He’ll be busy.

In his first public utterances, Dowden, a little mischievou­sly, told the nation to be ready for a general election. Perhaps what he, this time, meant to say was that his party should be on a war footing and in permanent campaign mode as it launches wave after wave of new culture wars against the opposition, with Dorries in the thick of it. He doesn’t quite have the common touch, it’s fair to say, of a Lee Anderson or Andrew Bridgen, but there are limits, and this is the cabinet, the public face of the party, that will be charged with having something to show for their four or five years in office, other than a gigantic pile of debt and record taxes – Gove building the houses, Javid cutting waiting lists, Zahawi sorting the schools out, Patel stopping the migrants, Shapps getting things moving, and all the rest of it. They’ll all be busy.

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 ?? (PA/Getty) ?? The pub l ic wi ll be hearing much more from Ol iver Dowden and Nadine Dorries after the reshuff le
(PA/Getty) The pub l ic wi ll be hearing much more from Ol iver Dowden and Nadine Dorries after the reshuff le

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