Starmer, and only Starmer, has to be to blame for accepting gifts. He was Leader of the Opposition when Boris completely screwed up by a lack of self-discipline. Starmer was head of the CPS. He has to know, as any public servant would, that taking gifts of any sort is problematic.
I would love to hear Rosie Duffield's take. She warned of boys clubs. I would not be surprised if there was an element of that. There is also a whiff of kitchen cabinet, something that Boris was also guilty of. Campaign boys cut off from the Civil Service, and thinking they know better. A good Government is a creative tension between strong, principled political leadership, and an experienced, neutral, Civil Service.
That said, Sue Gray, especially her background of running a pub in Northern Ireland's borderlands, is fascinating. No idea of what to make of her, though a short video clip suggests real charm and charisma. Would love to sit next to her at a dinner party.
The rewriting of Kemi's history is interesting. Not that long ago we were all very worried about the extent to which the Civil Services was captured and influencing Minsters on gender issues. Then we had a Woman's Minister who made real progress in pushing things back, including challenging the Scottish legislation which we hated. That Minister now says that she had to face off her senior Civil Servant, Sue Gray. Absolutely credible. But no, its Kemi, and we don't like Kemi, so she has to be "coattailing".
If Sue Gray was pushing for No 10 staffing to be broader, to pull in more with experience of Government, she was probably right. A tight campaign team is probably right for a campaign, but running a country is different. But who knows. I agree the language is interesting.