Showing posts with label Oliver Robbins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oliver Robbins. Show all posts

Friday, 29 September 2017

U.K.’s May Fights Tory Plotters with Brexit Casting Long Shadow

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May will try to revitalize her premiership at her party’s annual conference next week, with a cloud of uncertainty hanging over her country’s future - and her own.
Image result for theresa mayMay is trying to win over critics and fend off plots from rivals who want to replace her after June’s failed election gamble. A poll Friday showed most members of the party want her out before the next election, 13 percent want her gone now.
A split between May and her Brexit Secretary, David Davis, over rumors of his leadership ambitions now threatens to complicate the work of her government - and the U.K.’s withdrawal from the European Union. May is already fighting to keep one potential opponent -- her Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson -- on side after he set out his own competing agenda for Brexit in recent weeks.
“A split at the top of the Tories over Brexit will mean yet more delay in trying to get to the meat of the negotiation,’’ said Ivor Gaber, professor of political journalism at the University of Sussex and a contemporary of Davis at Warwick University in the late 1960s. “The Europeans must look at Britain and despair.”
The Prime Minister travels to Manchester this weekend for the Conservative Party’s annual conference, against a backdrop of recriminations over her failed election gamble and divisions within her cabinet over Brexit policy.
After the election resulted in May losing her majority in Parliament, Tory lawmakers and ministers privately warned that she would not be allowed to lead the party into the next election in 2022. She has since insisted she will stay on and has begun to fight to keep her job.

Champagne and Ferrets

At weekends and during the recess, May has launched what’s becoming known as her Chequers charm offensive - inviting Tories to her 400-year-old official country residence 40 miles (64 kilometers) outside London for canapes, sparkling wine and home-made chocolates.
The Prime Minister has her work cut out. Tories remain angry about the organizational failures that led to the election, while an undercurrent of squabbling at the highest levels is hampering the business of government.
One Cabinet aide, speaking on condition of anonymity because the subject is sensitive, likens the party to ferrets fighting in a sack, and compares the mood to the dying days of former Tory Prime Minister John Major’s administration, when rows over Europe dominated the agenda.
A leading euroskeptic, Davis was a key adviser to May in the run-up to the election and among the most influential of her team in persuading her to call the early vote.

Davis Lurks

After the election, his name was repeatedly linked in the media to leadership speculation, with surveys of party members making him the most popular choice to replace May in the summer. Newspapers reported that Davis’s supporters were canvassing for a potential leadership bid on his behalf.
Tories who remain loyal to May say her team have lost trust in Davis as a result. May’s aides believe Davis could have shut down the leadership rumors if he had wanted to, according to people familiar with the matter speaking on condition of anonymity because the discussions were private.
In recent days May has moved to take control over Brexit policy from Davis’s department, poaching his most senior official Oliver Robbins to take a new role running EU policy within her inner team.
In Brussels, EU officials are said to be growing frustrated with Davis, believing him to be an obstacle in Brexit negotiations because he seems to take a more hard line stance than May. In her speech in Florence a week ago, May promised the U.K. would honor its commitments -- code for paying the Brexit bill.

Behind the Scene

But arriving for the latest round of talks in Brussels on Monday, Davis warned the U.K. would only settle the bill if the EU agreed a new trade deal at the same time. Behind closed doors, too, Davis was said to have taken a more combative tone than May in talks, according to a person familiar with the matter who declined to be named because the discussions were private.
According to one minister, the Tories are facing a bleak future because Jeremy Corbyn’s radical socialist Labour Party is surging ahead in the polls, while all of the potential candidates for the Tory leadership have major drawbacks.
Johnson led the field of potential candidates in a poll of Tory members, who elect the party’s leader, in the Times on Friday, but he’s seen as divisive in the wider country because he was the figurehead of the Leave campaign in 2016, the minister said. 
Home Secretary Amber Rudd, another possible candidate, is vulnerable to being unseated at the next election, with a majority of just 346 votes in her own district.

Lunch Guests

While trying to outrun her challengers, May also needs to keep the support of rank-and-file Tory members of Parliament in order to stay in place.
Before the election, May’s office in 10 Downing Street ran a tight ship, strictly controlling access to the premier and enforcing iron discipline on the rest of the party. Since she lost her majority, however, the tables have turned.
“The Prime Minister’s team are working hard to keep the party united,” said Andrew Bridgen, a Conservative member of Parliament.
May’s new chief of staff Gavin Barwell hosts regular consultation lunches with Tories. Guests are invited to dine at the famous casket-shaped cabinet table, on meals of sandwiches, potato chips and soft drinks. That’s a change from is combative predecessors, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill.
“These things are important now that we have lost our majority,” said Bridgen. “In adversity, we must all hang together, or we will all hang separately.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-29/u-k-s-may-fights-tory-plotters-with-brexit-casting-long-shadow

Monday, 18 September 2017

Theresa May tightens grip on Brexit by hiring David Davis's right hand man

Theresa May has tightened her grip on Brexit by hiring the UK’s most senior negotiator after he repeatedly clashed with David Davis.

Jack Maidment, political correspondent 
18 SEPTEMBER 2017 • 12:26PM

Theresa May, the Prime Minister CREDIT: TOLGA AKMEN/AFP

Oliver Robbins, the top official at the Department for Exiting the European Union and Mr Davis’s right hand man during talks in Brussels, has now been appointed EU adviser to the Prime Minister.

He will report directly to Downing Street but will keep leading the UK’s team of officials during talks with the bloc.


It comes amid reports of a strained relationship between Mr Robbins, who was the permanent secretary at the Brexit department, and Mr Davis.

The shake up is likely to be seen as Mrs May asserting her authority over the talks and as evidence of her taking direct control of the negotiations.

Oliver Robbins, the former permanent secretary for the Department 
for Exiting the European Union
CREDIT: DARIO PIGNATELLI/BLOOMBERG


It is also likely to reinforce the Prime Minister’s reputation across Whitehall as a “micro-manager”.

The timing of the change is also likely to raise eyebrows across Westminster, coming days after Boris Johnson, the Foreign Secretary, made a dramatic intervention in the Brexit debate by publishing his own vision of what the terms of the UK's withdrawal should be.

A Government spokesman confirmed the move which was first reported by the Evening Standard.

The spokesman said: "In order to strengthen cross Government co-ordination of the next phase of negotiations with the European Union, the Prime Minister has appointed Oliver Robbins as her EU Adviser in the Cabinet Office, in addition to his role as EU Sherpa.

"He will continue to lead the official-side UK team in the negotiations, working closely with the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, and coordinate relations with the Commission and Member States.

"The Prime Minister has appointed Philip Rycroft, currently Second Permanent Secretary at the Department for Exiting the EU and Cabinet Office, as Permanent Secretary, Department for Exiting the EU.

David Davis, the Brexit Secretary CREDIT: DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP


"The Department will continue to support David Davis, the Secretary of State for Exiting the EU, to ensure a smooth exit and to seize the opportunities presented by leaving the EU.

"This will include his role as principal of the negotiations, leading on exit-related legislation, domestic preparedness for exit and engagement with stakeholders in the UK, including the devolved administrations, and in the EU27 and beyond."

Mr Robbins' move from the Brexit department to the Cabinet Office is understood to have taken EU officials in Brussels by surprise.

Sir Keir Starmer, the shadow Brexit secretary, said the move was further evidence of the “Government’s chaotic approach” to withdrawal negotiations.

“Deep divisions in the Cabinet and a complete lack of leadership are putting the national interest at risk,” he said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/18/theresa-may-tightens-grip-brexit-hiring-david-daviss-right-hand/