So au revoir, Sue Gray. Labour really is speedrunning the timeline of a government in crisis: it took Theresa May almost a year, and a near-defeat in a general election, before she had to ditch her hand-chosen lieutenants, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill. It’s taken Keir Starmer three months.
There will be much written on what this says about the government, and the likely impact on the Downing Street operation. But we must not overlook that Gray hasn’t left government altogether — and that her new role could provide plenty of scope for causing mischief.
The Prime Minister has appointed her “envoy for the nations and regions”. This is a new title, and it could be a non-job. But it implies that Gray is going to be at the heart of Labour’s policy for devolution and the Union, and that’s very bad news.
Back in July, less than two weeks after Labour took office, Gray was accused of “subverting Cabinet” by trying to take personal control of the decision of whether or not to award tens of millions in taxpayers’ money to Casement Park, the main GAA stadium in Belfast.
In 2020 she failed to be appointed head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, which for historic reasons is separate to the rest of the Home Civil Service. While no formal reason was given, Gray was reportedly a polarising figure, and was “particularly disliked by the DUP” due to her links to Irish nationalism.
These suspicions go back a long way. A key part of Gray’s story is the period during which she took a career break to run a pub in County Down. The rumour is that she was working for British intelligence, but the most famous anecdote — she was let through an IRA roadblock after they recognised her, and she received a welfare check-up afterwards — puts one more in mind of Shecky Greene’s famous joke about Frank Sinatra’s alleged links to the mob: “Frank Sinatra saved my life. Five guys were beating me up and Frank said, ‘Okay, he’s had enough.’”
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