Liam Fox is a threat to David Cameron, vulnerable, damaging to his government and bringing politics into disrepute - but the PM may be too weak to get rid of him.
From a prime ministerial point of view, the correct call on the Fox-Werritty scandal seems clear: It’s time to send the defence secretary on his way.
Either wrongdoing has been committed – in this case that an unauthorised personal contact, seemingly through friendship, had a high level of access into Ministry of Defence business, in addition to an expenses scandal – or it looks so bad that the government will continue be seriously damaged by Fox’s presence around the cabinet table.
Even as seriously, Werritty’s career in serial lobbying outfits that were not exactly great money-spinners but appear to have mirrored Fox’s ministerial path raises concerns of ‘taxis for hire’ political behaviour. However, numerous right-wing commentators have written this morning that Cameron is just too weak to get rid of Fox.
As Paul Goodman puts it on Conservative Home this morning:
“The most pressing reason for Cameron wanting to keep his Defence Secretary aboard is not the desire for a quiet life, but a fear of the future. As we know from the depature of Fox’s heroine, Lady Thatcher, stab-in-the-back myths can have potency and resonance.
“If the prime minister were to lose him quickly, he would not only have yet another senior right-winger loose on the backbenches but risk the emergence of exactly such a story – of a left-of-Tory-centre leader wanting to lose a right-of-Tory-centre rival.”
Meanwhile, Peter McKay in this morning’s Daily Mail writes:
“The defence secretary was a candidate in a leadership election won by moderate Cameron. He’s a token Thatcherite in a Cabinet of fence-sitters. He’d be sensitive to any interference from No 10.
“As a diehard Atlanticist, Fox also keeps close to the Americans, who might not actually choose our defence secretaries, but know how to get rid of them when required. Cameron wouldn’t want them thinking he was hassling their friend unnecessarily.”
Even Benedict Brogan, the coalition’s emmisary to Fleet Street, alludes to the prime minister’s problem thus:
“He and Dave will never be bosom mates, but Dr Fox serves a useful purpose as one of the few keepers of the Thatcherite flame around the Cabinet table.”
Fox is a threat to Cameron, vulnerable, damaging to his government and bringing politics into disrepute – but the prime minister may just be too weak to get rid of him.
See also:
• Fox admits doubling of nuclear price-tag – Kate Hudson, May 19th 2011
• Why is Fox “bigging up” the threat posed by Iran? – Frank Spring, March 1st 2011
• Coalition sacks brave troops rather than risk anger of defence contractors – Marcus Roberts, September 13th 2010
• Fox’s Sri Lankan jolly under scrutiny – Elliott Fox, March 23rd 2010
• Questions Fox must answer over close links to Sri Lankan “dictator” – Elliott Fox, February 18th 2010
36 Responses to “Weak Cameron will struggle to fire Fox”
Shamik Das
And for more on the #Fox #Werritty scandal see http://t.co/Sa0XP6D3 & http://t.co/H7MliGIg & http://t.co/DhbPcPgE #BBCQT
Sam Barnett-Cormack
I think Cameron is actually trying to look strong by not firing Fox.
E Azicate
weak, weak, weak: Why Cameron is struggling to fire Fox: http://t.co/gwzG550b
Fox resigns, sparking puns from all sides | Left Foot Forward
[…] Fox has certainly been greatly weakened already, and the Friday timing of the resignation hints at more to come in the Sunday papers – but the belief that a strong right-winger on the backbenches would be a danger for Cameron is a pervasive one within the right-wing blogs, as Daniel Elton reported for us on Tuesday. […]
Look Left – Cameron bids Fox ‘thank you and goodbye’ | Left Foot Forward
[…] There is more on Fox’s resignation on Left Foot Forward here, and we’ve got more on the Fox/Werritty scandal, as it developed this week, here, here, here and here. […]