Former cabinet minister Chris Grayling is being lined up for a plum job overseeing the work of Britain’s intelligence agencies, it has been reported.
Boris Johnson sparked anger at Westminster after the Sun reported he wants Grayling to be the new chair of Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC).
The cross-party ISC – which scrutinises the work of MI5, MI6 and GCHQ – is made up of nine MPs and peers and places on it are highly coveted among parliamentarians.
Members are bound by the Official Secrets Act and have access to highly classified intelligence material.
Senior MPs warned the choice of Grayling to lead it would badly undermine its credibility as an oversight body independent of the government.
During his time as justice secretary and later transport secretary, Grayling was involved in a series of controversies which earned him the nickname “failing Grayling”.
He finally lost his cabinet position when Johnson became prime minister last year, despite having enthusiastically supported his leadership campaign.
The leadership of the ISC was being seen among some MPs as a reward for his continuing loyalty.
Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “The Intelligence and Security Committee does crucial work holding the government and security services to account.
“It scrutinises evidence deemed too sensitive for the rest of us to see. The public needs to have confidence that the committee is independent of government.
“Installing a lackey of the prime minister – especially one with as little credibility as Chris Grayling – badly undermines that confidence.
“Principled Conservative MPs should refuse to go along with this latest authoritarian move.”
According to the Sun, as well as giving Grayling a place on the committee, Johnson will also instruct the other Conservative members to vote for him as chair.
They were said to include the former environment secretary Theresa Villiers and former security minister John Hayes.
One of the new chair’s first tasks will be to publish a report compiled by the ISC in the last parliament on Russian interference in the UK, which Johnson refused to release in the run-up to last year’s general election.