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Truss is just the latest PM to find that you don’t need enemies when you have friends like Gove

To some he’s a ‘snake’, to others merely treacherous – but the Surrey Heath MP is a voice you can’t ignore

Camilla Tominey ASSOCIATE EDITOR

It was only last week that Liz Truss invited Michael Gove into No 10 to see how he might be able to help her fledgling administration. Although the Prime Minister had refused to include the former chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster in her Cabinet – like her predecessors – Ms Truss recognised the importance of keeping mercurial, Machiavellian Gove inside the proverbial tent, urinating out – rather than the other way round. Advisers warned against it, mindful of the former Times journalist’s well-honed reputation for political backstabbing, but the meeting went ahead anyway.

On Sunday, their worst fears were realised when Gove, 55, declared the scrapping of the 45 per cent tax rate was “not Conservative”, forcing Ms Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng, the Chancellor, into an embarrassing about-turn on one of the key planks of their mini-budget.

The blow was doubly painful for Ms Truss, 47, since she had also helped her former Cabinet colleague through a difficult period following his separation from his wife of 20 years, Daily Mail journalist Sarah Vine, in June last year.

Despite outranking Gove in Cabinet, when she was foreign secretary, Ms Truss agreed for the homeless father of two to stay at her official London residence, Carlton Gardens, a sumptuous 19th century grace-and-favour property located just a stone’s throw from Buckingham Palace. As one insider put it last night: “Gove is an absolute snake. The way he has treated Liz is absolutely appalling. She called him in last week and asked him to help and this is how he repays her.”

As well as leading a rebellion over the proposed reduction in the top rate of tax, Gove is now angling for a climbdown on the Government’s proposal to increase benefits in line with wages rather than inflation.

Gove, who on Monday was described by Jacob Rees-mogg, the Business Secretary, as the “Tory party’s version of Peter Mandelson”, told Times Radio that while he would probably now vote for Ms Truss’s fiscal plan, he would oppose any move to stop linking benefits to inflation. “I would need a lot of persuading to move away from that,” he said. “But I wouldn’t want to prejudge an argument that was put in front of me before the argument was made.

“Because in crises, you sometimes have to do things and embrace policies that would in other circumstances be deeply unattractive.”

Behind the scenes, Downing Street aides are becoming increasingly exasperated by “treacherous” Gove’s unhelpful interventions as he continues to appear at multiple fringe events at the Conservative Party Conference in Birmingham.

Yet he has forever proved a thorn in the side of successive prime ministers. Even before he famously stabbed Boris Johnson in the back by running against him in the 2016 Tory leadership race, he had gained a reputation as a “shape shifter” while a minister in David Cameron’s government.

According to a source close to the

‘Gove’s political network is everywhere. He has these young, clever men who are all massively loyal to him.’

former prime minister: “Michael used to infuriate David. He used to say to him, ‘Michael, I don’t need your rhetoric, I need your ideas’. But the trouble with Gove is, he’s an actor. If you told him to make an argument for corporal punishment, he’d make it.”

An insider who worked alongside Gove and Johnson said that prime ministers seemed to feel compelled to keep him on-side because of his “extensive network”.

“Because he used to work for The Times and his ex-wife works for the Mail there’s this perception that he has got a hotline to two newspaper groups. Gove’s network is everywhere. He has these young, clever men all over the place who are massively loyal to him.”

Apparently, when Johnson finally sacked Gove in July, a couple of special advisers who worked for the former prime minister stormed off in tears.

Some MPS now suspect that Gove is using his protege, Kemi Badenoch, the current Trade Secretary who worked under him in the Department for Levelling Up, as his mouthpiece in the Cabinet. Yesterday, Mrs Badenoch, who backed Gove in the 2019 leadership race, said she had “been shouting at him a lot since Sunday”.

The MP for Surrey Heath had a rather testy relationship with Truss when they worked together in Johnson’s cabinet. According to one insider, the pair often came to blows over the Northern Ireland Protocol, which was included in both of their briefs. “Liz wanted to go quite hardline on it and Michael wanted to go extremely soft ... she felt that he was constantly calling up the Sunday papers and briefing against her.”

Ukraine was another source of tension between the two.

“Liz was being quite gung ho, basically riding on Boris’s wave. Priti [Patel] was getting a kicking in the papers over the visa scheme and then Gove suddenly started briefing that Ukrainians should be housed in the confiscated homes of Russian oligarchs. It was utter fantasy which wouldn’t have ever worked from a legal perspective but it served to make Michael look good, Liz look weak and Priti look stupid.”

Yesterday, Gove’s behaviour remained the talk of conference, with allies of Ms Truss openly discussing how he might get his comeuppance.

Jake Berry, the party chairman, has warned that rebellious MPS face having the whip removed. But as the subject of yet another party psychodrama, there’s a sense that some Tories are plotting a special kind of revenge against their resident agent provocateur.

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2022-10-05T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-10-05T07:00:00.0000000Z

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