Braverman grows more isolated over claim of police bias in Palestine protests
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt distanced himself from her words and Downing Street declined to say whether Rishi Sunak has spoken with her.
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Your support makes all the difference.Suella Braverman has grown increasingly isolated as Chancellor Jeremy Hunt distanced himself from the Home Secretaryās allegations of police bias over pro-Palestine protests.
Facing pressure to sack Mrs Braverman, Rishi Sunak continued to express his confidence in her, but No 10 declined to say whether the pair had spoken since her inflammatory unauthorised article.
No 10 said they were working āvery closelyā ahead of Saturdayās heavily-policed march, but chose not to repeat her widely-criticised language in a piece for The Times.
She claimed there is a perception police āplay favouritesā towards pro-Palestinian protesters who are ālargely ignored, even when clearly breaking the lawā.
The article prompted frustration and concern among Conservative MPs and sparked calls for the Prime Minister to dismiss her for failing to get sign-off from No 10.
Mr Hunt said he has a āproductive relationshipā with Mrs Braverman, but signalled Cabinet unease by telling reporters āthe words that she used are not words that I myself would have usedā.
A Downing Street spokeswoman declined to endorse the Home Secretaryās comments and stressed that it is for police to āmake operational decisionsā surrounding protests.
The official said the Prime Minister āhas confidenceā in Mrs Braverman, but did not rule out a Cabinet reshuffle, saying she would not discuss āspeculationā.
The spokeswoman repeatedly chose not to say whether the pair had spoken, but insisted āthey work very closely, as they have been on protests and preparations for the weekendā.
The Home Secretaryās actions have added to tension around the march planned for Saturday ā Armistice Day ā by pro-Palestinian groups, and the risk of counter-protests, particularly around the Cenotaph, even though the demonstration is not intended to go near the monument.
Scotland Yard will deploy nearly 2,000 officers across central London in a major policing operation over the weekend, with an exclusion zone for protesters imposed around the Cenotaph to prevent splinter groups congregating around national remembrance events.
The Palestine Solidarity Campaign behind the demonstration anticipated more than 500,000 people would join their protest to back a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel in what it billed as one of the largest political marches in British history.
Mr Sunak will need to decide whether the Home Secretaryās actions breached the ministerial code and, if so, whether he should sack her.
Senior officers and the head of the Crown Prosecution Service stressed the need for the police to be able to operate independently without political interference.
Education minister Robert Halfon said Mrs Braverman has a āunique way of expressing herselfā but would not say whether he agreed with Mrs Bravermanās assessment of alleged police bias.
āThe Home Secretary has been doing her job and of course I respect that, but of course, the focus has got to be to ensure that the Remembrance services go ahead peacefully and securely this weekend,ā he told LBC.
No 10 was still internally investigating the ādetailsā about how the article ā which contained a comparison between āpro-Palestinian mobsā and marches in Northern Ireland ā was sent for publication. He has not referred the matter to ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus.
It is understood that the article was submitted to No 10 but did not get signed off as significant alterations were requested. The piece was published nonetheless.
Opposition parties called on Mr Sunak to sack the Home Secretary, with Labour calling him āspinelessā for failing to act.
Even some Conservative MPs believe that Mrs Braverman has gone too far.
Justice Committee chairman Tory Sir Bob Neill said on LBC her position was āuntenableā.
A Conservative former Cabinet minister told the PA news agency that Mr Sunak should consider dismissing her if he cannot resolve the situation, as the row āunderminesā the Tory party.
Tory former minister Tim Loughton told The News Agents podcast: āSheās not making it easy, I have to say. And this needs to come to a head, itās doing quite a lot of damage.
āWe cannot have senior members of the Cabinet, on the face of it, defying No 10 and plying her own agenda.ā
And Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, treasurer of the influential backbench Tory 1922 Committee, suggested āwe cannot carry on as we areā with Mrs Braverman as Home Secretary, and Mr Sunak may be forced to act.
āI think he will certainly want to have a very serious conversation with her to seek an undertaking from her that either she will handle it in a calmer, private way in the future or possibly consider itās time for her to move to another job in the Cabinet,ā he told BBC Radio 4ās Today.
But Mrs Braverman has supporters on the right of the party and any move against her by Mr Sunak could deepen divisions within Tory ranks.
Tory MP Miriam Cates told Today: āI think the Home Secretary has a view that is very mainstream in the rest of the UK.ā
Lee Anderson, the Tory deputy chairman, said the Home Secretary was āguilty of saying what most of us are thinking and sayingā.
āThank goodness we have a Home Secretary who refuses to be cancelled,ā he said.
Veteran Tory MP Sir Edward Leigh said: āSuella merely says what millions of strong Conservative voters think.ā
There is long-standing speculation at Westminster that Mr Sunak will carry out a major ministerial reshuffle ahead of the general election expected next year, which could see Mrs Braverman moved.
More immediately, the Supreme Court will next week rule whether Government plans to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda are lawful.
There has been speculation that the Prime Minister may want to wait for that decision on the flagship project championed by Mrs Braverman before embarking on any reshuffle.
The row comes with only a day to go until tens of thousands of people take to the streets for the pro-Palestinian march.
Mrs Bravermanās article reflected her frustration with Metropolitan Police chief Sir Mark Rowley, who has resisted pressure from senior Tories to ban the demonstration in the capital.
Gavin Stephens, chairman of the National Police Chiefsā Council (NPCC), said that political views could not be allowed to influence decision making.
āThe decisions that we take are not easy ones, but we do so impartially, without fear or favour, and in line with both the law and our authorised professional practice,ā he said.
Steve Hartshorn, national chairman of the Police Federation which represents rank and file officers, told Today that officers feared being caught between a rock and a hard place over the pro-Palestinian march on Armistice Day.
He said: āI can pretty much guarantee this weekend, if things go different to plan and itās not safe, it will be police officers that get injured, members of the public, that will then be blamed on the police.
āWeāre damned if we do and damned if we donāt.ā
Director of Public Prosecutions Stephen Parkinson wrote in the Telegraph that āeffective and fair justice requires independent institutions to apply the law without fear or favourā.
He added: āThroughout this challenging period, the police have undoubtedly carried out their role with independence, resilience and grit.ā