Here’s a trick question: which Home Secretary has been subject to hostile briefings from within the department that they are too Right-wing, too populist, too lazy, too stupid and a bully?
It’s a trick because the answer is: almost all of them. You can pretty much take your choice from any of those who have arrived at the Home Office with a definable agenda, and one that differs from the received Home Office wisdom.
The briefings currently being meted out against Priti Patel are certainly severe. She has been accused of creating an “atmosphere of fear” by officials, an allegation strongly denied by ministers. But in the sweep of recent political history, they are entirely normal. The Home Office has always played dirty when a minister attempts to overturn its shibboleths. The moment its mandarins sniff trouble, stories start appearing in the press about how the new minister is out of his or her depth, unthinking, posturing and — always the same — a variation on stupid.
David Waddington is barely remembered today, but during Margaret Thatcher’s final 13 months as Prime Minister he was Home Secretary. For most of her time she had relatively liberal and traditional figures in that role but Waddington was anything but; he even supported the death penalty.
As a result, for 13 months he was subject to a non-stop campaign of denigration, almost certainly emanating from officials, horrified at having a boss who did not share their ingrained liberalism. His Guardian obituary damned him with the faint praise of being “not relentlessly illiberal”.
After Waddington was moved by John Major, the appointment of more congenial Home Secretaries in the form of Kenneth Baker and Kenneth Clarke meant that officials could return to the traditional department policies of attempting to mitigate failure. But when Michael Howard was appointed in 1993, all hell broke loose. Howard had what was, to his officials, the bizarre idea that the department’s role was not to cope with rising crime but to reduce it. Worse, he believed — as he famously put it — that “prison works”.
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