Morning Call: Bottom of the Heappey
Two ministers have resigned – and more Tory MPs will follow.
Good morning. The Prime Minister’s plan to send his MPs off on holiday with an upbeat message about the economy was scuppered by two ministerial resignations. Robert Halfon and James Heappey both called it quits. They are also standing down as MPs at the next election. Some thoughts below.
Then, Kara Kennedy asks whether she needs a gun as an Englishwoman in America.
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You can interpret their resignations in two ways.
On the one hand it’s normal for MPs in the governing party to bow out, as the natural conclusion of their time in office draws near. Halfon was first elected in 2010 and Heappey in 2015. At the close of the New Labour period and in the wake of the expenses scandal, 100 Labour MPs stood down. So far, after a slightly longer time in office, 63 Tory MPs have said they want to leave. Reports that the government has asked MPs to stagger their announcements suggests that the number will grow – and also why further resignations won’t come as a surprise.
On the other hand, their departure suggests that MPs think the election is lost and/or the party is turning into something they don’t want to partake in. This latest round will particularly sting for No 10 because both ministers were seen as specialists with decent experience. Heappey was the well-respected minister for the armed services, to whom Labour’s shadow defence secretary John Healey paid tribute in the House of Commons yesterday. Halfon, who was responsible for apprenticeships and skills in the Department for Education, has built a reputation as an advocate for re-skilling those without the training necessary to get well-paid jobs. He follows his colleague Nick Gibb, a former education minister who left in November with a similar reputation, but for schools. Sunak is now running low on experienced ministers.
But there is a third noteworthy aspect to their resignations. Both MPs managed to stay relatively aloof from the Conservative civil war 2016-24. Heappey, for instance, stayed in post throughout the year of the three prime ministers. It was seen – and this tells you a lot about Westminster – that as a former major who had served in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Ministry of Defence, he actually had the skills to do his job rather than being a member of the right faction.
Which brings us to the subsequent reshuffle. Leo Docherty will become armed forces minister and Luke Hall, education minister. Nusrat Ghani receives a promotion to the Foreign Office. Sunak supporters Alan Mak and Kevin Hollinrake both get promotions too.
Meanwhile, the PM has taken this opportunity to appoint Jonathan Gullis as a deputy party chairman, ultimately replacing Lee Anderson who has now defected to Reform. Gullis is a fervent critic of illegal migration and a member of the Common Sense Group of MPs, led by John Hayes. No 10 will hope that he jettisons Anderson’s disloyalty while retaining the ability to appeal to those voters – and, perhaps more importantly, those MPs – furious about the crossings in the Channel.
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I’m a British woman in America. Do I need to buy a gun?
I’ve been to more gun shops in America than clothes shops. When I first got here, my frequenting of gun shops was mainly to poke fun at the dumb Americans who bought guns. Who were these monsters? What did they look like? My escapades were more to ensure that when my British friends and family visited and wanted to look at the infinite gun shops that line the streets, I would be in on the joke too. Then, a few months in, I realised it was likely that I myself would become an American who bought guns.
Somewhere along the way, I just came to like guns. There were the cowboy-looking ones; the James Bond ones; the miserable, grumpy-farmer-looking ones; and the cartel-looking ones. I would unironically go into gun stores because everybody in those shops knows everything about each one and wants you to know everything. And I wanted to learn. Depending on which state the gun store is in (with a special shout out to West Virginia), the people in the gun store also really want you to have a gun too. “I don’t have the paperwork,” I said to one shop owner. “We’ll work something out,” he replied before pointing me to the ones I could “take home today”, the bolt-action rifles. (Pistols, or “short guns”, are regulated differently and more tightly. And even in America virtually nobody can get what gun people call a full automatic and normal people call a machine gun.)
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