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Michael Gove’s faultless prophecy Backstabbing has never seemed so prudent

You were warned (Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

You were warned (Jack Taylor/Getty Images)


August 25, 2022   4 mins

As Boris Johnson prepares to exit No 10, leaving a country teetering on the brink of recession with widespread civil disobedience in the offing, it is time to consider a heretical thought: was Michael Gove right all along?

I do not mean whether he was right in his policy decisions or political stances, although this can’t be discounted. In the Coalition government of 2010-2015, it is near-impossible to recall a single policy which, either then or now, seemed like a good idea. Perhaps the sole exception was Gove’s free schools’ policy, which offered children from often disadvantaged backgrounds the chance to have a world-class education.

This was achieved in the face of extreme opposition from the trade unions — not least the teachers’ unions — and other parts of the Left. It was also passed with minimal support from sections within his own party. When David Cameron was shown the opinion polls ahead of the 2015 election, he fired Gove from Education because he thought his approval ratings were, largely thanks to the lies of the teaching “blob”, subpar for a leader wishing to win a general election. Nevertheless, Michael Gove was right — and it wasn’t for the last time.

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After the 2015 election, he became known in Whitehall for his mastery of his brief. Most ministers who go from portfolio-to-portfolio struggle to understand the complexities of just one of their jobs, let alone each of them in turn. Yet this is exactly what Gove did at Justice — even though he was there for less than a year — and in each of the cabinet positions he subsequently held.

He was right, too, in the call he made in 2016. Before Gove chose to vote for “Leave”, there were concerns that the Brexit campaign would suffer from being led by too few senior politicians: an operation with Chris Grayling and Bernard Jenkin as its figureheads was unlikely to inspire a democratic revolt. Gove recognised this — and while campaigning to leave the EU was entirely in keeping with the principles that defined his political career and the years in journalism that preceded it, it still took bravery for him to step up. It alienated Gove from much of his friendship group (not least the Camerons), and could have cost him dearly politically.

The thing, though, that Gove was most right about, and for which he has been praised for the least, is the act which made him most infamous. It gave him a reputation for snakery. This was, of course, his decision in the immediate aftermath of the referendum to turn on Boris Johnson.

It is not easy to forget the febrile atmosphere of June 2016; every hour turned up enough news to last a month in normal times. But it was also a perilous time: people were genuinely afraid. Basic questions remained unanswered. Would EU citizens be allowed to remain in the UK? Who is running the country? Once David Cameron left office and his Chancellor, George Osborne, decided to punish the country further by disappearing completely, only the Governor of the Bank of England emerged to say anything on behalf of the nation. “We are all prepared for this,” Mark Carney reassured the country. Yet it was a moment of maximal instability.

The Leave campaign “victory” press conference the morning after the referendum was like a funeral. Perhaps the news of David Cameron’s political demise, and the looming Tory chaos that would follow, cast a pall over proceedings. Or perhaps it was the realisation of the task that lay ahead. In those uncertain hours, the one thing that seemed clear was that to the victor most go the spoils. Boris Johnson had led the Leave campaign and it seemed inevitable that he should become the leader of the Conservative Party and the Prime Minister of a newly independent country.

But Michael Gove put a stop to all that. Over the weekend after Brexit, something changed. Some people claim that Gove suddenly had visions of his own ascent to a higher office. Others believe that Nicholas Boles is to blame. Or was it that, in the aftermath of the referendum, Gove watched Boris Johnson and saw a man who was fundamentally unfit for the role of Prime Minister?

When Gove held a press conference in which he announced that he would not be leading Johnson’s campaign for the leadership, he immediately assumed a new role in the public imagination. Suddenly, he was Gove the turncoat, Gove the assassin, Gove the backstabber. The Gríma Wormtongue of British politics. The party swiftly showed its disapproval.

This cloud, by and large, has not left him. Only yesterday, one embittered newspaper columnist saw fit to describe Gove as “a conniving, reptilian politician”. Is this really true? He did, after all, survive through Theresa May’s premiership, and stuck loyally beside her when other people would not. He even entered Johnson’s own cabinet, and excelled in the roles he held in that short-lived administration. And not only is he the only politician who has remained at cabinet level through this tumultuous decade and a half, but he is also one of the few people from Cameron’s cabinet who is still in the House of Commons. Some lost out on the top prize and huffed off. Others whose abilities could have been of use to the country decided that the country did not deserve them — though various investment funds, as chance would have it, did.

It seems unlikely that Gove will actually remove himself from frontline politics. I read his announcement at the weekend as an act of cynical self-deprecation. Or perhaps a hint that he needs to simply “step back” for a bit. But whatever his own future holds, it shouldn’t prevent us from taking a clear view of his legacy.

Historians will debate when exactly Gove saw through Johnson. Perhaps it was during the referendum campaign or perhaps it was before it. Perhaps, like so many other people, he knew Johnson’s faults as well as his virtues, but simply hadn’t seen both in such clear focus before. Perhaps it was the lack of seriousness, lack of attention to detail and lack of hard work — the feeling of coasting when he should have been concentrating harder than he ever had in his life. Or perhaps there really were things in the immediate aftermath of the referendum that persuaded him that Johnson was fundamentally unfit to lead the country; the weekend after the vote, as the country desperately looked around for a leader, Johnson decided it was the perfect time to host a “boozy barbecue” and a cricket match.

It could have been some of these things, all of them or more. But after the thwarted, indecisive, wasted years of the Johnson government, there is one thing people should reconsider. In 2016, Gove didn’t simply backstab Johnson; he issued a warning. It took the rest of the Parliamentary party and much of Britain another six years to decipher his warning: that when Johnson finally lumbers out of No 10, he will leave defeated and humiliated. Don’t say we weren’t warned.


Douglas Murray is an author and journalist.

DouglasKMurray

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Claire D
CD
Claire D
1 year ago

Anyone who thinks it is a good idea to give all children the chance to learn Latin and Greek at school has my backing. It was a good idea defeated by the teaching unions, utterly despicable and nihilistic.
I have no doubt Michael Gove is flawed and has made some mistakes but he does seem competent.
Good luck to him.

Last edited 1 year ago by Claire D
CHARLES STANHOPE
CS
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

I put it to you that Gove was merely “playing to the gallery “ when he made that paean about reviving the Classics.
He knew full well that the irredeemably marxist teaching unions, who regrettably ‘educate’ 93% of our children would have none of it.
Incidentally didn’t the Ancients Greeks believe that physiognomy revealed something about the individual? Apropos this, on my first spying Gove I thought ‘weirdo’. Am I alone in this?

Last edited 1 year ago by CHARLES STANHOPE
Claire D
CD
Claire D
1 year ago

I think and hope you are wrong.
Scepticism can be useful, cynicism No.

CHARLES STANHOPE
CS
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

It’s a fairly fine line between scepticism and cynicism as I am sure both Zeno and Diogenes would have agreed.

Claire D
CD
Claire D
1 year ago

I don’t know about Zeno and Diogenes, I am not a classicist or a philosophy graduate, but scepticism means to have doubts until more facts are produced, and cyncism means to disbelieve everything, thinking that everyone’s motives are always venal. It is as nihilistic as neo-marxism and post-modernism.

Last edited 1 year ago by Claire D
CHARLES STANHOPE
CS
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

A good reply, thank you.

Paddy Taylor
PT
Paddy Taylor
1 year ago

I have been a huge PG Wodehouse fan since my early teens.
Many years before Mr Gove ever came to public attention, whenever I read Wodehouse and Gussie Fink-Nottle was involved in the action, in my mind’s eye I pictured him looking precisely like the young Govester.
During one of Mr Gove’s first appearances on a Question Time panel I remember shouting ‘It’s Gussie!’ at the screen (much to my wife’s confusion), and I’ve never been able to take him very seriously since.

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Paddy Taylor

An excellent comparison!
I must confess to more prosaic thoughts, likening Gove to the “Milky Bar Kid”on first observing him

Nicky Samengo-Turner
NS
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

but not of the status of Bill and Ben The Flowerpot men, or Andy Pandy…

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

Or even “WEED”!

Nicky Samengo-Turner
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

no: perfectly ghastly little ” central casting line manager” little man- would make a moderate footman or under-butler or valet.

SUSAN GRAHAM
SUSAN GRAHAM
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

I am 75 years old and attended a grammar school in the 60s where I had to study Latin for two years – can anybody tell me how this has enriched my life? It used to be a compulsory subject for those going on to study medicine although not sure if even that policy has been abandoned? Far more useful would be Spanish or Mandarin, unlike here in Wales where Welsh is mandatory in all schools – totally useless outside of Wales unless going to live in Patagonia!

Claire D
CD
Claire D
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

Only you can answer your question, but I would point out that there were other children in your class, a few or some or many of whom were enriched by learning Latin. Just because you as an individual gained nothing by it should all children be denied the opportunity ?

Claire D
CD
Claire D
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

I have found an answer to your question, you might want to consider whether it is true for you. According to one university “the benefits of learning Latin are, as a highly organized and logical language it sharpens the mind, cultivates mental alertness, creates keener attention to detail, develops critical thinking and enhances problem solving abilities.”

Last edited 1 year ago by Claire D
Anna Knowles
Anna Knowles
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

I enjoyed learning both Latin and Greek as a schoolgirl more than sixty years ago and agree with Winston Churchill who said that ‘learning Latin is a privilege and Greek is a treat’, despite his having also written humorously of his own struggles with Latin.
There is much evidence to support the claims that skills acquired from studying the classics are transferable. Dilly Knox, who headed the team that broke the Enigma code was a classicist, as were many of his colleagues.
A young man of my acquaintance, a mathematician who works in high finance, tells me his brightest colleagues are all classicists.
My late husband’s brilliant mentor when he was a young engineer, took a first in Greats at Oxford, decided there was no money in the classics so returned to Oxford and took a first in physics.

Bryan Dale
BD
Bryan Dale
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

I found my knowledge of Latin very useful in law school. It has also helped me in studying Romance languages, which are all descended from Latin.

Claire D
Claire D
1 year ago
Reply to  Bryan Dale

Yes, also very useful in studying history, especially medieval and early modern.

Richard Ferguson
Richard Ferguson
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

There is absolutely no point in studying Mandarin in schools for multiple reasons (and I say this as someone who studied it for two years in China and has a good command of both French and Spanish): (1) we have no wide ranging Mandarin language infrastructure across the education system and it would take decades to develop it (2) you will never get to a standard where you will use it professionally or even at tourist standard (and, even if you did, I don’t see China as a mass market tourism destination (3) English is, for better or worse, the “de facto” (sic) language of commerce and (4) the reason we learn a language anyway (given (3)) is to train the brain rather than for commercial or cultural reach. In short, any language is useful rather than a specific one.

Anne Humphreys
AH
Anne Humphreys
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

Both my sons learned latin at school and as a result gained a sound understanding of grammar and some useful insights into etymology. They both enjoyed it far more than the modern languages they were taught; an indictment of the poor quality modern language tuition in the uk.

Jeremy Reffin
JR
Jeremy Reffin
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

Hello Susan. Latin is not required (or expected) of a prospective medicine student. Last time I checked, an A-Level in Chemistry is the only qualification specifically required, although the courses are popular and academic standards are typically high.

Oliver Nicholson
ON
Oliver Nicholson
1 year ago
Reply to  SUSAN GRAHAM

It has given you – though you probably do not know it – an idea of the anatomy of language. This clearly enables you to express yourself succinctly and clearly. French and Spanish do not do this as their syntax and grammar is almost as chaotic as those of English. If children do not learn Latin, they should learn German, which is at least inflected.

Ben J
Ben J
1 year ago

Gove’s role in the Covid lockdowns, and his obvious appetite for statism, destroyed any sympathy I might have had for the man.

Christian Moon
CM
Christian Moon
1 year ago

Gove (and Cummings) got Covid wildly out of proportion. He was instrumental in enforcing the tyranny that followed.

I fancy he now recognises that as a serious mistake. All that is left for him is facing the public enquiries to follow. Why bother to fight for such a political life?

Last edited 1 year ago by Christian Moon
CHARLES STANHOPE
CS
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Christian Moon

‘We’ hanged better men at Nuremberg than those two male hysterics.
As for an ‘enquiry’, it will be yet another pointless waste of public funds, when we can ill afford such luxury.

Paul Walsh
PW
Paul Walsh
1 year ago
Reply to  Christian Moon

To be fair to Gove, he is a champion of education. His policy of shutting down schools achieved record GCSE results last year, even now we are still above pre-pandemic levels.

Margaret TC
MT
Margaret TC
1 year ago

The one thing Gove did recently that revealed his political intelligence was support Kemi Badenoch’s bid for number 10.

Stephen Walsh
Stephen Walsh
1 year ago

Michael Gove was Minister for the Cabinet Office from February 2020 to September 2021. Boris Johnson wasn’t running No.10, Gove was. And Gove’s fingerprints were all over every major failure in Johnson’s premiership.

CHARLES STANHOPE
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago

Gove along with Cummings needs to be thrown into the “pit of eternal stench” and forgotten.
Between them these two cretins have squandered the greatest Tory election victory in a generation. There can be no forgiveness.

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
1 year ago

Not them, others. I don’t especially like or trust either, but they both have a very clear idea of what will have to be done to stop this chaos and incompetence

Kerie Receveur
AM
Kerie Receveur
1 year ago

Gove is the one who authorised the £1.8million and title of “Children’s City of Culture” for ROTHERHAM.
This act alone has undone any good work he may have done at the Education Dept.
He’s a disgusting individual.

Malcolm Webb
MW
Malcolm Webb
1 year ago

Gove is too bright by half and tragically most of the rest are quite the opposite.

SIMON WOLF
SW
SIMON WOLF
1 year ago

Was this article written by his old pal Dominic Cummings under an alias?
Gove is a minister who fully wanted Covid lockdown and Net Zero to be even draconian .Arguably the 2 policies history will most comdemn as destroying the British economy and civil liberties.As a journalist he was an ultra hawk on the Iraq War.As a student he was a Marxist.
In short he is one of many of his generation who has gone from Marxism to being a Neo-Con to being an Enviromentalist.All 3 Utopian ideas.Conservatism was originally about stopping Utopian ideas destroying affluent freedom loving stable societies.
Imagine if Britain over the last 40 years had never had Marxists,Neo-Cons or Enviromentalists influencing our politics

pat lowe
pat lowe
1 year ago

He lost much credibility for me when he was photographed clapping the child Greta Thunberg.

Richard Warren
RW
Richard Warren
1 year ago

Gove was undoubtedly correct in his assessment of Boris, but I honestly can’t believe he hadn’t known these facts for years. Surely anyone with eyes and any sense of propriety was well aware, at least as early as Boris’s term as London Mayor, that he was completely unfit to lead the country. I assume most Tory MPs all knew this as well, but just felt Boris would win the election for them and they could worry about the implications of that later.

Alan Jackson
Alan Jackson
1 year ago

Fine article but Douglas you are too fine a thinker to come out with that too stale cliche so meant to impress: a “world-class” education. An education does not need to be “world-class” whatever that means it simply needs to be good.

Malcolm Knott
MK
Malcolm Knott
1 year ago

I am still reeling from the dreadful punishment of George Osborne’s departure from government.

David Simpson
DS
David Simpson
1 year ago
Reply to  Malcolm Knott

me too. So sad.

Paddy Taylor
PT
Paddy Taylor
1 year ago

“It seems unlikely that Gove will actually remove himself from frontline politics.”
I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see MG back in a Liz Truss cabinet, she’ll need some people around her who have proved at least halfway competent..
Besides, it would seem fitting as the latest chapter in her rather slavish Thatcher-Cosplay drama.
An Iron Fist in a Velvet Gove

Last edited 1 year ago by Paddy Taylor
CHARLES STANHOPE
CS
CHARLES STANHOPE
1 year ago
Reply to  Paddy Taylor

Sadly Truss is no Napoleon.

Nicky Samengo-Turner
NS
Nicky Samengo-Turner
1 year ago

So true.and an understatement, ..like Prof. Hawking was no Ice Hockey goal minder…

Bryan Dale
BD
Bryan Dale
1 year ago

He may have been right about Boris, but certainly wrong to put himself forward as a future prime minister. From what I’ve seen his “mastery of his brief” essentially means that he’s good at parroting the leftist groupthink of Whitehall. The man has seldom expressed a conservative idea.

Andrew M
Andrew M
1 year ago

We can deride the wasted years of the Boris Johnson government, but what’s more sobering is that he was still better than May.

Steve Murray
LL
Steve Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Andrew M

I’ve glanced back through the article, and no mention of Covid. So the “wasted years” of the Johnson government largely consist of pushing Brexit through the seemingly intractable fog he inherited from Theresa May and the House of Commons before immediately becoming embroiled in the pandemic and finally, the aftermath. Absolutely, Johnson allowed himself to be consumed by the howling media due to his faults, but they were faults that the UK electorate pretty much recognised and it’s hardly a positive for Gove that he could see them too. Nor did they make Johnson “unfit to be Prime Minister” – he might’ve done better had Covid not hit, but that’s history now.
In short, this article is politically illiterate, which is something of a surprise given that i normally rate Douglas Murray (no relation!)

Graffiti Avenue
SA
Graffiti Avenue
1 year ago

The truth is we are all being made poor that is a act of slavery in itself by are dibble dumb leaders.They do not speak for us or deliver for us.The whole media is controlled by the government in this country like we see in China & America nowadays.It’s only when Trump came it shake up the system of the over bearing globalist now they want us too forget he was President.The leaders now rule the world like the Chinese emperors with a India like system by keeping people at the bottom if we don’t do as they say or cancel us for speaking out and being free.
We will let you live like we do if you do as we say like what we like & think and do vote are way.
most of all be a good citizen & do not Judge your leaders.

People’s only freedom now is going too the mall too eat out at Burger King & buying a sofa & I phone.But if you can’t afford it tough with the cost of living tough luck you get too watch them talk about the good times they had at party with god awful people.
Talking about god awful people that’s what Liz Truss will be the moment she’s in office.She seem too be care less about the migrant crisis & the crime wave happening on the streets & young people having knives or anything,All she seem too care about is low taxes that will be promise broken already and talking too ordinary people like a Oxford student.She’s more hell bent on ramping up the war that could get us all Nuked in one blast & I feel that is her mission.The endless pushing of diversity in all of our faces is something they seem too be going ahead with even if people like it or not is one of their policy.The whole woke thing is out of control people get cancel now for saying good morning & expressing a opinion that does not go with the whole system it is madness.

Jane Watson
JW
Jane Watson
1 year ago

‘after the vote, as the country desperately looked around for a leader, Johnson decided it was the perfect time to host a “boozy barbecue” and a cricket match’.

Oh, shock, horror…

Jeremy Reffin
Jeremy Reffin
1 year ago

A colleague has met and worked with a number of ministers in the recent Conservative governments and is pretty dismissive of all except Michael Gove, who was, in his view, head and shoulders above all the rest in terms of brains, competence, and the ability to get things actually done.

Russell David
Russell David
1 year ago

There was a great article in the DT a couple of months back by Matthew Lynn about how Gove is a one-man economy wrecking-ball. Douglas should read it.

Russell David
RD
Russell David
1 year ago

Yes Gove was right about Johnson, the most appalling person to ever hold the keys to Downing Street, but he was also a swivel-eyed lockdown fanatic. He could not have been more wrong about NPIs. To me, that means he can never be forgiven.

Ian Stewart
Ian Stewart
1 year ago

So Andrew, as a consequence of Gove’s ‘rightness’ on Johnson, you think it was a good decision to put May in charge as PM, with the subsequent fiasco over the Brexit agreement?

Rachel Taylor
RT
Rachel Taylor
1 year ago

I, as I suspect many others, have mixed views about Gove. There’s no doubt that at Education he overcame the Blob to improve standards. But, on Covid, he was plain wrong. At Ministry of Housing, he seems to have little idea how to “level up”, but maybe that’s not his fault as Housing is hardly the place to start.

J Q
JQ
J Q
1 year ago

Gove. Who cares?