we asked about the source of his euroscepticism. Not his early employment at Tate and Lyle as some assume. He reminded he was Whip on the Maastricht bill. Described himself as a "civilised eurosceptic" (not a "bastard" TM John Major
DD was very critical of the Cameron pledge to take the Conservatives out of the EPP (the root of many of his difficulties with Angela Merkel as others have pointed out)
and he disagrees with Cameron (and others) who said the referendum was inevitable
V interesting to think what might have happened if Davis had won that election contest as he looked nailed on to do before they "screwed up" .
Moving on, Davis is very critical of Cameron's naive approach to renegotiation. Quite a telling insight here given what came later
fascinating snippet of a chat he had with @George_Osborne during the referendum campaign (NB he was surprised at Gove and Johnson coming out for Leave, not at May on being remain - "security obsessed" as Home Sec)
and Davis's personal focus group on where the referendum was going
Did I say there was a lot on this..... there really is.. and on referendum night, David Dimbleby asked him not to call the result too soon
so onto government....fair to say he did not expect a call from No.10 (another great Cabinet shuffle story)
Davis assumed the task of negotiating Brexit would fall to @fcdo -- and definitely not the @cabinetofficeuk -- but he was also VERY sceptical about @UKCivilService and #brexit
Amid that scepticism a shout out to one civil servant (quite an unusual one) Tom Shinner in his old dept
Philip Hammond told us he was taken aback by @theresa_may conference speech. Even her Brexit secretary was - and thought it betrayed a misunderstanding of Leave voters
On the reasons for that disastrous 2017 election which he and Hammond supported.. to see off the House of Lords and gain time
early signs of tension with Olly Robbins given an impossible job as DExEU perm sec and PM sherpa... and the latter trumping the former role
On trying to recover from being overruled on sequencing in the early stages of the negotiations - trying to link the financial settlement to the future relationship
On that joint report....
and - although it doesnt actually ever feel like this in No.10 - Davis's view on who always wins in battles between depts and the PM (this after he had asked for Robbins to be moved in frustration)
Davis was much more gung-ho on No Deal than No.10 or the civil service
Lots more on the joint report... negotiations with DUP; views from ERG etc.. read it in full -- and so to Chequers ....
Davis dismisses the two white papers thesis, but notes a divergence between him and No.10 over - divergence
And by the Thursday before Chequers, David realises he is going to have to go
Lots more on who said what at Chequers .. do read Hammond described Davis as liking an SAS style negotiation.. He certainly war gamed the timing of his resignation
So more after that on the Johnson resignation, and views on what came next - read the whole interview here ukandeu.ac.uk/brexit-witness…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
with news Boris Johnson might be making a come back, good time for @UKandEU to publish a stocktake on how far we have got on his 2019 promise to "Get Brexit done" - an in depth look at how the state has adapted to Brexit. ukandeu.ac.uk/wp-content/upl…
First we look at the impact on the size and shape of the civil service: lots more people - numbers up by over 100k since 2016. Not all Brexit of course - covid, asylum etc. But a lot are. And a lot of those are long-term jobs. Brexit = British bureaucrats
We've had a turbulent time since the referendum. Lots of political change. But lots of machinery of government changes as well. Remember DExEU? We now (probably) have reached the end of post-Brexit Mogging with the creation of @biztradegovuk
Watching HoL constitution committee with @nickmacpherson2@marksedwill and former first civil service commissioner on dismissal of perm secs. Nick says always been removals but volume has gone up and notes Scholar removed preemptively by Kwarteng
Note that @AlexGAThomas and I gave evidence earlier to this. Sedwill also points out similar dismissal of his successor as national security adviser "equally damaging".
Sedwill suggests cttee should investigate the "underlying reasons" for the increase in the number of removals. Sedwill says due to a "mix" of reasons. Since coalition PM can choose from all the appointable candidates emerging from CSC-led process.
This is very good from @DavidGauke. To pick up and expand on one point. When I was in private office, I saw my role as shielding the minister from sub-standard advice. I would tell my fellow civil servants their stuff was not good enough to put in.
@DavidGauke same message - but very different when coming from a relatively junior civil servant than from a minister. And if someone was poor in a meeting, we'd call them or their boss afterwards saying the minister was unimpressed and they needed to up their game
@DavidGauke and if we had a serious issue, we would tell their boss that the minister had lost confidence in X and they needed to sort it. Or haul in the permanent secretary.
Was annoyed at 7.00 and annoyed again at 8.00 by @BBCr4today news presentation of the "aid cap". There is no "aid cap". There was a legislated target of 0.7% GDP to be spent on aid.. a target, not a "cap". No maximum
Rishi Sunak reduced that to 0.5% "temporarily" without legislating. Now looked as though that will be baked in to future forecasts. But then we found out govt is classifying lots of UK spend on refugees as "aid"
That spending is going up -- why UK will score itself as spending more on "aid" - perhaps breaking the cash limit (because it can't cut other aid enough to accommodate it).
Another day - remembering back to the leadership election of 2019. @DavidGauke told us why the Conservatives went for the by then unstoppable Boris Johnson
Brexit party chair Richard Tice told us how ABB - Anyone but Boris had changed post those disastrous (for the Conservatives) European elections - and "did for the Brexit party"
.@OwenPaterson claimed credit for Johnson's win for the ERG
In two weeks time Boris Johnson will be replaced as Prime Minister.. but he has been a critical political figure of the past decade so over the next fortnight I am going to dip into @UKandEU#Brexitwitnessarchive to paint a picture of him
Lets start with early Johnson. Former Eurocrat Jonathan Faull told us why there might have been a presumption that Johnson would understand Europe and the EU
But of course, his journalism in Brussels was about identifying comedy examples of EU red tape - it was on such a hunt that @OwenPaterson first encountered him and gives insight into his journalistic technique