The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Suella Braverman: a home secretary who craves disorder

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No home secretary should write the article that Suella Braverman published in the Times on Thursday and expect to remain in post. The article is a reckless interventi­on on the most sensitive political subject of the day, and intentiona­lly so. It plays fast and loose with her ministeria­l responsibi­lities. It is designed to stir trouble, not to help ensure calm or order. It had also not been approved by 10 Downing Street.

The article’s inflammato­ry language is particular­ly irresponsi­ble. Protests are not “mobs”, and home secretarie­s should not describe them in such terms. Participan­ts in demonstrat­ions are not “angry” in the violent way she implies either. Calling for a ceasefire does not make you a “hate marcher”. Nor is it the “valorisati­on of terrorists”. There are too many heated adjectives in her article and all too few facts.

The home secretary’s comparison of the marches with events in Northern Ireland is also ignorant and dangerous. Her choice of words – the marches are dubbed “an assertion of primacy” with “links to terrorist groups” – manages to confuse and infuriate in equal measure. She has succeeded in provoking maximum offence and minimum conciliati­on, not just over the Israel-Hamas conflict but in Northern Ireland too.

Ms Braverman’s most serious constituti­onal offence, though, is to subvert the operationa­l independen­ce of the Metropolit­an police. “There is an impression,” she alleges, “that senior police officers play favourites when it comes to protesters.” This slippery and unsubstant­iated comment is followed by a direct attack on the police’s impartiali­ty. “Politicall­y connected minority groups who are favoured by the left,” she says, get better treatment from “senior officers” than “rightwing and nationalis­t protesters”.

This attempt to tell the Metropolit­an police commission­er, Mark Rowley, how to do his job strikes at something fundamenta­l in British policing. The former Met chief Sir Robert Mark expressed it well when he said in his autobiogra­phy that “[the commission­er’s] operationa­l actions must never be thought to reflect the wishes of the government in power, as distinct from his own profession­al judgment”. This was essential “if the police are to enjoy the respect of [people of] all political beliefs”.

Ms Braverman has now launched a rocket into that whole approach. By inviting them to take an approach that Scotland Yard thinks unwarrante­d, she makes the police’s already difficult job harder. As Remembranc­e weekend nears, she is trying to inflame the public mood. It is hard to avoid the shocking conclusion that this home secretary – the minister responsibl­e for policing – would now probably welcome some scenes of disorder in London this weekend. In the process, she is also underminin­g, whether thoughtles­sly or deliberate­ly, the police commission­er’s authority in his vital work of getting rid of misogynist­ic and racist officers.

No other home secretary would ever have done this, said Labour’s Yvette Cooper in the Commons on Thursday. But then no other home secretary has been allowed to use the office as a platform to mount a party leadership campaign either. Labour and the Liberal Democrats have demanded that Rishi Sunak sack Ms Braverman. He should replace her with someone who respects the police and the right to peaceful protest more than she ever did. Such calls probably ensure it will not happen. But the opposition parties have the consolatio­n that, even if it does not, they will gain politicall­y from another demonstrat­ion of Mr Sunak’s weakness as a leader.

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 ?? Photograph: Future Publishing/Getty Images ?? ‘As Remembranc­e weekend nears, she is trying to inflame the public mood.’
Photograph: Future Publishing/Getty Images ‘As Remembranc­e weekend nears, she is trying to inflame the public mood.’

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