‘Career psychopath’ Dominic Cummings’ spell as Boris Johnson’s top aide is expected to be over by Christmas with the Vote Leave campaign maestro tipped to run one of his Government ‘pet projects’ or ‘make a fortune’ as a consultant.
Boris Johnson’s most senior official resigned yesterday after Carrie Symonds reportedly blocked the promotion of his right-hand man Lee Cain following months of civil war in No 10.
The Prime Minister plans to ‘reboot his premiership’ by removing the Vote Leave cabal lead by Mr Cummings, clearing the stage for more ‘liberal’ policies with a focus on green issues championed by the PM’s fiancee.
Whitehall sources today claimed that Mr Cummings could soon be offered the job to lead Britain’s first £800million defence research agency. The proposed body, based on the American Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), is described as one of his ‘pet projects’.
One source told the FT: ‘One expectation among Whitehall mandarins is that Mr Cummings may leave Number 10 to become the first head of his pet project: a new high-risk, high-reward scientific research body based on the Darpa agency in the US’.
Mr Cummings’ 16 months in Downing Street will also give him the chance to earn millions of pounds as a consultant advising businesses on Brexit, the coronavirus crisis and gaining access to Whitehall. His current special adviser salary is between £95,000 and £99,999.
Another insider told MailOnline: ‘Dom has been driving reform of the civil service – he could make a fortune as a consultant’.
The 48-year-old father-of-one, who is married to Spectator journalist Mary Wakefield, the daughter of baronet Sir Humphry Wakefield, could also choose to write a book about his time in Government, which could secure him a publishing deal of between £500,000 and £1million.
Dominic Cummings, pictured today, is being tipped to run a defence research agency, described as one of his ‘pet projects’ at No 10, or become a consultant
Boris Johnson and his fiancee Carrie Symonds watch the 2019 Election results come in at No10 Downing Street with Dominic Cummings in the background when the Tory PM secured a huge majority
Boris Johnson (pictured leaving Downing Street today) is believed to want to ‘reset’ his government with a new ‘softer’ image
Boris Johnson refused to sack Dominic Cummings (pictured together) despite his trip to Durham during the first lockdown
He is also expected to restart his blog, where he wrote about Brexit, education reform and even claimed to have predicted the coronavirus pandemic. Last year he also extolled the virtues of a DARPA-like agency for Britain, which some claim he could soon run.
His resignation yesterday came just six months after the Prime Minister refused to sack his Svengali despite his controversial 260-mile trip to Durham during lockdown causing irreparable damage to the public’s trust in Government.
Mr Cummings also drove 30 miles to the popular tourist spot Barnard Castle to test his eye sight, risking passing the infection to others at a time where Mr Johnson was telling 66million Britons not to leave home unless it was absolutely essential.
But Mr Johnson stood by him, despite widespread calls for Mr Cummings to be fired and prosecuted. The decision saw the Prime Minister’s popularity with the public plummet, especially after his aide’s press conference in the Downing Street garden where he denied he had done anything wrong.
Last night he was understood to have handed the Prime Minister his resignation and will leave his role before the New Year.
Mr Cummings pointed the BBC’s political editor Laura Kuenssberg to a January blog post in which he expressed a wish for his job to be ‘redundant’ by the end of the year.
But a Downing Street insider said he ‘jumped because otherwise he would be pushed soon’ amid claims his Vote Leave team were just ‘in it for themselves’.
The maverick Brexiteer has pulled the levers of power at the heart of Government as Mr Johnson’s most influential adviser – but he has also been accused of ‘looking like a bully’ at times.
Mr Johnson is said to be looking towards life after Mr Cummings and building a ‘more liberal, global Britain’. A senior Tory told The Times: ‘He [Mr Johnson] has been frustrated at the way these guys have operated at times. They can do things in stupid ways’. Another said of Mr Cummings’ abrasive style: ‘There is an acknowledgement that we need to reset relationships’.
The developments mark the end of the Vote Leave clique’s iron grip on government, which has been the cause of a mounting backlash from senior Conservatives frustrated at their aggressive approach, ‘incompetent’ handling of the coronavirus crisis, and clumsy U-turns on issues such as free school meals during the holidays.
Tory MPs have called the 48-year-old ‘an unelected foul-mouthed oaf throwing his weight around’, a ‘political anarchist’ and an ‘aggressive bully’. Undaunted, Cummings sees these as badges of honour. He revels in his public image and in being seemingly engaged in perpetual warfare with colleagues.
A friend of the PM said recently: ‘Boris and Dom are like brothers…. Boris is not a great thinker, he is a broad brush person. Dominic is the brains and details man.’
Cummings, son of an oil rig project manager and a special needs teacher, was educated at Durham School where yearly fees rise to £35,000.
As a teenager he helped an uncle run the city’s notorious Klute nightclub, a venue once said to be ‘Europe’s worst’.
Dominic Cummings, pictured leaving his London home today, is expected to leave his current role before Christmas
Boris Johnson had initially offered to promote communications Lee Cain to become chief of staff. But he dropped the plan following objections from his partner Carrie Symonds (pictured with Mr Johnson)
Mr Cain, pictured yesterday, an ally of Mr Cummings, quit on Wednesday night after Mr Johnson’s change of heart. He was Mr Johnson’s director of communications
The web of connections in Downing Street, which has been reeling from factional infighting during the coronavirus crisis
After Oxford where he read Ancient and Modern History, Cummings spent three years in Russia where he attempted to set up an airline, before being appointed director of Business for Sterling which campaigned successfully to keep Britain out of the Euro.
Before rising to become the Prime Minister’s top aide, Dominic Cummings worked as director of strategy for the Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith in the early 2000s.
But he quit after eight months in frustration at his boss’s ‘incompetent’ leadership. Cummings then led the successful 2004 campaign against the establishment of a North-East regional assembly, winning with 78 per cent of the vote.
He was appointed special adviser to Conservative politician Michael Gove in the Department of Education from 2007, before being dismissed by David Cameron, who once referred to Cummings as a ‘career psychopath’, in 2014.
He quickly became known for his blunt style and his criticism of other senior politicians, once referring to Nick Clegg’s proposal on free school meals as ‘Dreamed up on the back of a cigarette packet’.
In 2012, during his time as special adviser to Mr Gove, a senior female civil servant received a payout of £25,000 in a bullying case she took against Cummings and a senior member of Gove’s team.
When Mr Gove became Education Secretary, the pair ran the department as an autonomous wing of the Government, re-designing curriculums, planning more academies and setting up free schools.
From 2015, Cummings was the power behind the Vote Leave campaign that propelled Britain towards backing Brexit in 2016.
He first emerged as a public figure during the campaign, coming up with the winning slogan Take Back Control.
While Boris Johnson and Michael Gove were in the limelight the 47-year-old remained in the shadows pulling the strings. He over saw a campaign that totally outflanked Remain and which is widely credited with leading to the 52-48 result in favour of quitting.
Such was his central role he was played by Benedict Cumberbatch in Channel 4’s Brexit: The Uncivil War. In the 2020 revival of Spitting Image, he is portrayed “as a creepy alien with a pulsating head who drools at the prospect of eating Boris Johnson’s baby’.
Mr Cummings was appointed as Johnson’s key No 10 official when he became PM in July 2019, despite having undermined his bid for the Tory leadership in 2016 by treacherously backing Gove’s candidacy, surprised many Tories.
For Johnson, ambitious to use Brexit to revolutionise and modernise Britain, having a rule-breaker on board was vital.
Johnson’s initial offers to Cummings to join him in Downing Street were rejected. So Johnson cycled across Islington in North London to Cummings’s home to hear what he described as a list of ‘terrorist demands’.
Johnson quickly conceded and once he became PM, made Cummings his key staffer.
Dominic Cummings, special advisor for Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrives in Downing Street in May before contracting Covid-19
Ever the strategist, Cummings placed himself in the corner of the hall in No 10 so he would be filmed by the cameras as Boris Johnson made his triumphant first entry after seeing the Queen.
As Cummings intended, many Tory Brexiteers were horrified. ‘If we’d known that Cummings would come,’ said Bill Cash, ‘it would have caused a lot of angst. I was against Vote Leave because of Cummings.’
When Tory MP Greg Clark, a Remainer, called Cummings to discuss a truce, he was told: ‘When are you f****** MPs going to realise, we are leaving on 31 October? We are going to purge you!’
Cummings’s priority was to Get Brexit Done. Britain, as his boss pledged, would be out of the EU by October 31, 2019. ‘Nothing will stand in the way of that,’ he vowed.
In the crash-and-burn tactics devised by him, the No 10 svengali was happy to see a political and constitutional crisis if it achieved a disorderly Brexit, and then hold a General Election to win a Tory majority under the banner of ‘People v Parliament’.
What followed was Cummings’s high-risk strategy of Johnson controversially proroguing Parliament, 21 Tory MPs losing the whip and others in open conflict with Downing Street.
In a blog, he dubbed the fervently anti-EU European Research Group ‘narcissist delusionals’ and ‘useful idiots’ whose intransigence ‘has helped only Remain’.
‘During the referendum, so many of you guys were too busy shooting or skiing or chasing girls to do any actual work,’ he added.
‘You should be treated like a metastasising tumour and excised from the UK body politic.’
With Cummings urging Johnson ‘Hold your nerve’, the tactics paid off. Britain left the EU – and the Tories won their biggest Commons majority since Margaret Thatcher in 1983.
Since his return to frontline politics, Cummings has had civil servants in his cross hairs, from proposals to abolish the Department for International Development, to axing the Justice Department and removing procurement responsibilities from the Ministry of Defence.
And every one of his utterances, blog-postings or tweets has been pored over by a Whitehall contemptuous of his determination to ‘professionalise’ the advice given to ministers.
Last year he posted a bizarre job advert in which he calls for ‘super-talented weirdos’ to apply to work at Number 10.
Writing on his personal blog, Mr Cummings sets out plans for a Downing Street shake-up in which maths and physics PhDs would mingle with ‘weirdos and misfits with odd skills’ and people who ‘fought their way out of appalling hell holes’.
Mr Cummings warns recruits that he will ‘bin you within weeks if you don’t fit’, adding: ‘Don’t complain later because I made it clear now.’
Cummings has demanded personal loyalty from every political assistant. ‘If you don’t like how I run things,’ he shouted at one meeting, ‘there’s the door. F*** off!’
Some were sacked. One was Sonia Khan, a Treasury media adviser, who was escorted by armed police from Downing Street after a confrontation with Cummings over her contact with those close to the former chancellor Philip Hammond.
She is set for a £100,000 payout, it was reported today.
David Cameron branded him a ‘career psychopath’ after an interview in which Cummings shredded the competence of the Department of Education while blaming a Tory PM who ‘bumbles from one shambles to another without the slightest sense of purpose’.
He was even ruder about Cameron’s aides, calling spin doctor Sir Craig Oliver ‘just clueless’ and describing chief of staff Ed Llewellyn ‘a classic third rate suckup, kick-down sycophant presiding over a shambolic court’. He was no kinder to Tory MPs; former Brexit secretary David Davis was ‘thick as mince’.
Mr Cameron was asked about Mr Johnson’s top aide in September and said: ‘I did sack him twice but he kept coming back. We didn’t necessarily hit it off but he’s a man of great, I mean he’s very clever, he is very able.’.