Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Peter Walker Political correspondent

Dominic Raab’s abrasive political career hits the buffers

Dominic Raab
Dominic Raab was said to be a tough boss, insisting on an inflexible schedule including daily gym time. Photograph: Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty

Dominic Raab has faced more ministerial fluctuations than most: sacked, demoted or resigning from three government jobs, he was also in effective charge of the UK when Boris Johnson was ill with Covid. But now, it seems, he faces a political full stop.

His departure as justice secretary and deputy prime minister after the report by Adam Tolley KC marks the end of efforts by his allies to present him as nothing more than a demanding boss who works long hours and knows what he wants.

Numerous officials, senior and junior, who had worked under Raab in three different departments thought differently. To them, he was at best someone whose conduct could be highly unprofessional, at worst an outright bully.

One of the curiosities of Raab’s various rises and falls has been that his seemingly default abrasive manner has never really been in doubt, or even contested. The question was just whether or not this was seen as a net positive.

Arriving in parliament in 2010 aged just 36 with a healthy majority in his home counties constituency of Esher and Walton, plus an impressive CV as a lawyer, including work bringing war criminals to justice, Raab was immediately among the more prominent of the new Tory intake.

He was among five Tory MPs, also including Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng, to contribute essays to Britannia Unchained, a 2012 book that set out how to save the UK from perceived mediocrity through free markets, low regulation and a renewed sense of rightwing bullishness.

Raab had by then already come to the attention of colleagues thanks to a 2011 article in which he argued that men were “getting a raw deal” in society, labelling feminists as “amongst the most obnoxious bigots”.

Among those to notice was Theresa May, the then home secretary and also minister for women. She was unimpressed, which was seen as a factor in Raab’s slow progression to even a junior ministerial post, only attained after the 2015 election.

Even then progression was not smooth. A year as a justice minister came to an end when May succeeded David Cameron, and Raab languished on the back benches again.

His status as an avowed Brexiter helped when May decided to return him to government in 2017. Within a year he was in the cabinet, as Brexit secretary, but resigned months later, in November 2018, over her proposed Brexit deal.

Even now, hints about Raab’s character and approach were emerging. He was said to be a tough boss, insisting on an inflexible schedule including daily gym time. A former staffer told a reporter she found him “very dismissive” to women and rigid, insisting on being fetched an identical Pret a Manger lunch every day.

It was under Johnson that Raab reached his ministerial pinnacle: foreign secretary and deputy prime minister, with the latter job putting him at the helm of No 10 while Johnson was in hospital. But his apparent lack of flexibility was about to cause even greater difficulties.

In August 2021, as Kabul fell to the Taliban, Raab resisted calls to return from a family holiday in Crete to oversee the crisis. Once eventually back in London he reportedly held up work on evacuations by requesting documents be presented to him in a specific format.

The political damage was grave, and a month later he was demoted by Johnson to justice secretary, although keeping the now largely courtesy role of deputy PM.

More political flux was coming, although this time from outside forces. Loyal to Johnson to the end, he vigorously backed Rishi Sunak in the ensuing Tory leadership contest, calling Liz Truss’s economic plans “electoral suicide”.

While his words might have been prescient, they consigned Raab to the backbenches yet again, before the most unexpected turnaround of all – Truss’s demise, and the ascendancy of Sunak, who restored Raab to his old jobs.

But within weeks of his return, reports began to emerge of complaints about Raab’s manner and behaviour in all the government departments he had headed, spanning several years and at least two dozen different officials.

A counter-spin campaign by allies of Raab was notable in effectively agreeing he could be a tricky and far-from-cuddly boss, one who worked long hours and “expected very high standards”. Sympathetic columnists highlighted such characteristics as a virtue, with predictable digs at “snowflake” civil servants.

The verdict has now gone against Raab, and an even more definitive one could follow. When he first took his Esher and Walton seat, Raab’s majority was more than 18,000. In 2019 it was below 3,000, with the Liberal Democrats closing fast.

Subsequent demographic changes have pushed ever more ex-Londoners into the Surrey seat and it is now one of the Lib Dems’ main targets. The label of a bully will not help. A political end looms.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.