The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Dominic Cummings: voting to leave

- Editorial

Boris Johnson should have asked his chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, to resign months ago when he broke the first coronaviru­s lockdown and showed no regret afterwards. Perhaps Mr Johnson thought he could not do without the architect of his election victory and his ally in pursuing a hardline Brexit. But the damage was done. Public confidence in the government’s handling of coronaviru­s fell and has not stopping falling since.

Mr Cummings walked out of Downing Street, in an act of theatrical defiance, on Friday. It is a mark of the tragicomic nature of Mr Johnson’s government that a week of infighting within No 10 dominates the news at a time of national emergency when hundreds are dying every day from a dangerous disease. Mr Cummings gets to walk away while Britain is stuck with the damage he has wrought.

He won the Brexit referendum by spreading lies, unconcerne­d about damaging public trust. He has snubbed parliament, weaponised populist sentiment against state institutio­ns and played fast and loose with the constituti­on. He may say that unconventi­onal times needed unconventi­onal ideas. But he seemed to enjoy his war too much. He picked, and lost, too many fights for his own good. A swirling cast of characters was drawn in. Even Carrie Symonds, Mr Johnson’s fiancee, got involved.

Mr Cummings was edged out of power before he could flounce out. This tawdry episode demonstrat­es two things. One is Mr Johnson’s palpable lack of leadership in a crisis. He encouraged his chief adviser to embrace his inner Leninism — where the end justifies the means. Second is the government’s well-deserved reputation for incompeten­ce. The prime minister over-centralise­d Downing Street and let Mr Cummings ride roughshod over a weak cabinet that he had hand-picked but which lacked the confidence or foresight to predict problems.

Mr Cummings’ plans have gone awry thanks to the unpredicta­bility of politics. After the US election his ideas for a hard Brexit were going nowhere. A Biden White House would have little time for the UK if it turned its back on Europe. Mr Cummings’ departure is a clear indication that the prime minister is ready to make the compromise­s needed to strike a deal with the EU.

Coronaviru­s required bigger government. Fiscal conservati­ves like the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, and many other Tory MPs worried that once voters understood that big spending would not bankrupt the economy they might get a taste for decent public services. Mr Sunak wanted to balance the books, Mr Cummings wanted to blow them up. He agitated for the un-Tory idea that state power could turbocharg­e the economy, making powerful enemies in No 11.

Resentment­s have built like sediment on the river bed of Conservati­sm and threatened to choke the flow of government. Backbench MPs see Mr Cummings’ contempt for them as symptomati­c of a high-handed Downing Street and have rebelled in such numbers that it threatens the stability of a government that, paradoxica­lly, won a landslide largely thanks to Mr Cummings.

Mr Johnson might think that, without his adviser, his ungovernab­le party becomes governable. But he might find that elections become unwinnable. Some of this is more about style than substance. Mr Johnson still has to make good on his promise to “level up” Britain, especially since north-south divisions have been dramatical­ly exposed by coronaviru­s. The prime minister needs to up his game. Once gained, a reputation for incompeten­ce is hard to shift. Too often with Mr Johnson the buck stops somewhere else and blame is dumped on someone else. With Mr Cummings out, there is no hiding place for Mr Johnson.

 ?? Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters ?? ‘Mr Cummings gets to walk away while Britain is stuck with the damage he has wrought.’
Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters ‘Mr Cummings gets to walk away while Britain is stuck with the damage he has wrought.’

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