Why the dither over Zahawi's resignation?published at 06:58 Greenwich Mean Time 30 January 2023
Chris Mason
Political editor
Nadhim Zahawi’s sacking has felt increasingly inevitable for at least a week – almost all his colleagues, in private, growing in exasperation that he’d neither resigned nor been fired.
So why the dither? Rishi Sunak has sought to define integrity by seeking to establish the facts first rather than act impulsively.
Privately, some ministers saw this as naïve, “too nice” as one put it.
Sunak’s judgement is borne of his character, but also his political circumstances; the fifth prime minister of this Conservative run in office, dire opinion poll ratings and restive backbenchers.
And so smothering internal anger is seen by No 10 as crucial, even if its consequence is the appearance of defensiveness, hesitancy.
And there’s a pattern here:
The resignation of an ally, Gavin Williamson, over allegations of bullying, which Sir Gavin said he refuted.
The appointment of Suella Braverman as home secretary, after she backed him for the leadership – but also a week after she’d resigned from the very same post for breaking the ministerial code.
And the ongoing investigation – by a senior lawyer – into the Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab, another ally – over accusations of bullying he denies.
This is unlikely to be the last time Rishi Sunak faces difficult questions about those he’s chosen for high office.