Politics

Michael Gove's No 10 hopes falter after cocaine admission


Michael Gove’s campaign to be Conservative leader is hanging in the balance with calls for him to quit the race, as he was forced to insist he never misled officials about his use of class A drugs.

The environment secretary gave an interview admitting he was “fortunate” to have avoided jail for possession of cocaine, after a new book revealed he had taken the drug on several occasions while a journalist around 20 years ago.

He said he had never misled UK government officials or US border authorities by failing to declare he had used drugs in the past and dismissed the idea that he could be subject to a ban on travelling to the US in future as “foolish”.

However, rival teams said momentum was quickly moving away from Gove and towards other candidates who have a similar stance on Brexit – Sajid Javid, Jeremy Hunt and Matt Hancock – amid multiple accusations of hypocrisy.

Labour and Liberal Democrat politicians criticised Gove for double standards, while Sayeeda Warsi, the former Tory co-chairman, said he should “step away from the leadership race” after showing “hypocrisy of the highest order”.

What happens next in the Tory party leadership race?

As she announced on 24 May, Theresa May will step down formally as Conservative leader on Friday although she will remain in place as prime minister until her successor is chosen.

The rules for the contest to replace her have been tweaked by the backbench 1922 Committee, with the backing of the party’s board, in order to prevent the contest dragging on for weeks.

Nominations will close at 5.30pm next Monday. Candidates will have to show that they have the support of eight of their colleagues: a proposer, a seconder and six other MPs.

MPs will hold a series of votes, in order to narrow down the crowded field, which currently stands at eleven leadership hopefuls.

How does the voting work?

MPs choose one candidate, in a secret ballot held in a committee room in the House of Commons. The votes are tallied and the results announced on the same day.

The 1922 Committee has decided that after the first round, any candidate who wins the support of less than 17 MPs, will be eliminated. And after the second round, the threshold will be set at 33 MPs.

Rounds of voting will then continue until just two candidates remain. The first round will be held on Thursday 13 June from 10am to noon. Subsequent rounds have been pencilled in for the 18th, 19th and 20th.

The two remaining candidates will then be put to the Conservative membership for a vote.

When will the results be announced?

Once MPs have whittled down the field to two, Conservative party HQ takes over the running of the next stage, which it says will be completed in the week beginning Monday 22 July.

Will there be hustings?

Yes: MPs have organised a series of events themselves to put the candidates through their paces, kicking off with an event convened by the One Nation group on Tuesday evening. Conservative party HQ will organise its own events; and the BBC has also announced several televised debates between the candidates.


Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA

Javid, the home secretary and one of his fellow leadership contenders, also hit out at middle-class users of class A drugs who failed to think of the “countless lives destroyed” by the trade.

As Gove’s campaign scrambled to respond, the cabinet minister confronted the allegations directly in an appearance on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show, where he said he profoundly regretted taking cocaine. He had already made a confession to the Daily Mail, after it presented him with the allegations in a soon-to-be published biography by the journalist Owen Bennett.

However, he looked rattled as he was challenged over whether it was right for him to have overseen a policy of teachers getting kicked out of their profession for taking class A drugs while he was education secretary and to have presided over a prison system as justice secretary in which people could be sentenced to up to seven years for the crime of possession.

Gove said he had shown a “determination to help people whatever their background, including at education and justice” and that he believed that “whatever people have done in the past we should look for the treasure in the heart of every man”. A spokesman later said that he had not personally brought in the policy that teachers should be banned for drug use.

The cabinet minister also said no one had ever asked him about drug use when he took office.

“I don’t believe that I’ve ever on any occasion failed to tell the truth about this when asked directly,” he said, when asked if he declared his past drug use to US authorities. The Electronic System for Travel Authorisation visa waiver form for entry into the US asks: “Have you ever violated any law related to possessing, using or distributing illegal drugs?”

A spokesman later said Gove had taken legal advice from a QC who is “satisfied that Michael completed his forms correctly”.

Three other rival candidates – Hancock, Hunt and Dominic Raab – were also preparing to launch their campaigns, as Johnson consolidated his position as the frontrunner. Those working for some of the campaigns said they considered it was “game on” for the second place candidate likely to go into a runoff with Johnson, following the derailment of Gove’s campaign.

As Gove scrambled to get back on track on the day at least 11 candidates were expected to submit their formal bids to the Tory party, other developments included:

  • Boris Johnson won the backing of senior Eurosceptics, including Steve Baker and Priti Patel, plus several centrists including Theresa May’s ally James Brokenshire. However, a source close to French president Emmanuel Macron poured scorn on Johnson’s threat to withhold the UK’s £39bn divorce bill unless he could secure changes to the Irish backstop, with the source saying it would be equivalent to sovereign debt default. Rival leadership candidate Rory Stewart said the threats were “undignified… and irresponsible”.

  • Jeremy Hunt, the foreign secretary, claimed Angela Merkel had told him the EU would be willing to renegotiate the UK’s Brexit deal and possibly the Irish border arrangements.

  • Javid said he would slow the rate of debt reduction to spend billions of pounds on schools and promised to freeze fuel duty.

Candidates are likely to be pressed further about their history with drugs at their launch events this week, including Johnson, who has suggested he tried cocaine once but only because he sneezed and it may have been icing sugar. On another occasion, he gave a different story that trying cocaine and cannabis at university “achieved no pharmacological, psychotropic or any other effect on me whatsoever”.

Gove’s drug confession appears to have been particularly damaging because of the accusation of hypocrisy, with the Observer reporting that in 1999 Gove wrote an article in the Times setting out why he opposed what he called “London’s liberal consensus” on loosening rules on the use of cocaine and other drugs. In the piece, headlined “When it’s right to be a hypocrite”, he set out why he believed drug laws should not be repealed.

Warsi launched the most blistering critique of his conduct on Sunday, telling Channel 4 News: “It cannot be that those that govern us are subject to a lower standard of criminality than those who are being governed. Michael Gove needs to step away from the leadership race. It’s completely inappropriate for him to continue.”

Norman Lamb, a Lib Dem former health minister, also weighed in, saying: “Previous drug use should not exclude people from high office. What should exclude people from high office is hypocrisy. What the Liberal Democrats want to see the next prime minister do is end this hypocrisy of advocating draconian policies and instead enact reform.”

Louise Haigh, the shadow policing minister, said: “It cannot be right that Michael Gove should face no consequences for his own past actions but that other people have their lives ruined by the war on drugs.”



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