They are falling like ninepins, and the Tories have now given the weary people of Britain yet another prime minister. And what a catch: stupendously wealthy, youthful 鈥 the youngest in two centuries 鈥 and a lawbreaker. As chancellor of the Exchequer in the Boris Johnson government, he was fined for COVID-19 lockdown breaches during the 鈥淧artygate鈥 scandal, despite telling parliament that he had not attended illegal gatherings.
The released in response to the fine was ice cool, belying the fact that he had become the first chancellor ever charged with an offence while in office. 鈥淚 understand that for figures in public office, the rules must be applied stringently in order to maintain public confidence,鈥 Sunak said. 鈥淚 respect the decision that has been made and have paid the fine.鈥 The outcome was always likely: not paying could have landed him in an even stickier situation.
Being sly with regulations is obviously something that runs in the family. Sunak鈥檚 wife, Akshata Murty, ran into some trouble earlier this year when attention was brought to her non-domiciled status in Britain. She a jaw-dropping 拢700 million in shares in the Indian IT giant Infosys, from which she received 拢11.6 million in dividend income last year.聽
Declaring one鈥檚 domicile to be in another country can be a fine money saver: in this case, 拢2.1 million a year. But Murty wanted to be generous and gracious 鈥 at least for her husband鈥檚 political ambitions. 鈥淚 understand and appreciate the British sense of fairness and I do not wish my tax status to be a distraction for my husband or to affect my family,鈥 she said.
Thatcherism
Sunak鈥檚 coming to power is a perfect statement of the leader estranged and continentally distant from voters, a person evidently bored by his time as a banker and keen to make a showing in parliament. 鈥淚n his technocratic aloofness,鈥 George Eaton , 鈥淪unak resembles an IMF official poised to impose a 鈥榮tructural adjustment programme鈥 on a stricken developing world economy鈥. The analogy is not out of place, given what 鈥淭russonomics鈥 has done to Britain in a matter of weeks.
While Sunak distanced himself from his predecessor鈥檚 loopy variant of steroid-fed Reaganomics, the inner Thatcherite鈥檚 heart continued to beat to the rhythm of nostalgia. As Thatcher鈥檚 own chancellor, Nigel Lawson, said of Sunak, he was 鈥渢he only candidate who understands Thatcherite economics鈥.
He is very much in favour of fiscal tightening and keeping public spending thin, and, like the 鈥淚ron Lady鈥 he so adores, happy to tout tax rises if needed. Thatcher, it should be remembered, raised the Value Added Tax from 8% to 15% and imposed the infamous poll tax otherwise advertised as a 鈥淐ommunity Charge鈥.
Sunak鈥檚 belief in redistribution is of a rather distasteful variety. As Labour had, in his ill-chosen , 鈥渟hoved all the funding into deprived urban areas鈥, it was incumbent on the Tories to undo it. 鈥淚 managed to start changing the funding formulas to make sure areas like this are getting the funding they deserved.鈥 The area in question was the rather well-heeled town of Tunbridge Wells, Kent.
During Sunak鈥檚 tenure and the 鈥渓evelling up鈥 programme of Johnson, the wealthiest parts of Britain amounts of money up to 10 times more per capita than the poorest. Sajid Javid鈥檚 wealthy constituency of Bromsgrove in Worcestershire was earmarked to receive 拢15 million, or 拢148 a head. Eight local authorities counted as some of the poorest in Britain received less than 拢10 a head from levelling up funds.
Brexit
His economic embrace of Brexit was filled with hubristic assessments, some of this evident in a he wrote for the Centre for Policy Studies in 2016. 鈥淏rexit will provide the UK with new economic freedom, and the Government should take the opportunity to create Free ports across the nation,鈥 he wrote. Such ports would 鈥渋ncrease manufacturing output, create employment regionally where it is most needed, and promote trade鈥.
The report obsesses over the presence of 3,500 Free Trade Zones (FTZs) spread across the world, with the United States deserving a special mention: 250 FTZs 鈥渨hich employ 420,000 people and handle 拢750bn of merchandise鈥. Sunak offered airy predictions about what free ports would do to the unshackled British economy, including 86,000 jobs 鈥渋f they were as successful as the US Foreign Trade Zone programme鈥.
Such a rarefied market world says little about civic duties and citizenship. It speaks volumes that Sunak expressed scepticism about lockdowns and has preferred to take climate change less seriously than others, even within his own party. The issue of whether planning permission is going to be given to in a generation 鈥 in Cumbria 鈥 has been dismissed by Sunak as a 鈥渓ocal issue鈥.
Sunak had to be persuaded to change his mind to attend the United Nations Climate Conference (COP27) in Egypt. He his about-face on Twitter: 鈥淭here is no long-term prosperity without action on climate change.聽 There is no energy security without investing in renewables.鈥 Green MP Caroline Lucas it as a 鈥渟creeching U-turn鈥.
The change of heart suggested a weakness to the Labour opposition. 鈥淭he prime minister,鈥 to Labour climate policy spokesperson Ed Miliband, 鈥渉as been shamed into going to COP27 by the torrent of disbelief that he would fail to turn up鈥. Miliband said that the only reason for making an appearance was 鈥渢o avoid embarrassment, not to provide leadership鈥.
[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]