MICHAEL Gove has asked the public to judge the Government “by our actions” amid a row over Rishi Sunak’s “disgraceful” snubbing of COP27.
The Cabinet minister insisted the Government will “field the strongest possible team” for the United Nations climate summit in Egypt next month, after the Prime Minister pulled out citing domestic challenges.
The King, who was advised by Downing Street not to attend COP27, will host a reception marking the conference on Friday, with Sunak due to say a few words, Buckingham Palace announced.
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Meanwhile, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is still set to attend the summit, with a Scottish Government spokesperson saying it was of “vital importance” that governments work together to tackle climate change.
Gove defended the Government’s record on the environment after COP26 president Alok Sharma suggested the Prime Minister’s snubbing of the conference could signal the UK is deprioritising green issues.
“I know that across government we want to field the strongest possible team at Cop but there are strong pressures on the Prime Minister’s diary,” Gove told Sky News’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme.
“Even more important than who goes is what we do,” he told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg, saying the UK is the “fastest” decarbonising economy in the G7 and is moving towards electric vehicles and renewable energy.
“Judge us by our actions,” he said.
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas said Sunak should be rethinking his decision not to attend the Sharm El-Sheikh summit.
She told Kuenssberg: “It is absolutely so wrong that Rishi Sunak is not going because the UK is still the holder of the COP presidency. Symbols matter.”
Asked about reports that Boris Johnson could attend COP27, she said: “I think this is probably about the first decision that Boris Johnson has made that I might support.
“If it embarrasses Rishi Sunak to reverse his disgraceful decision and actually get there himself, all and good.”
Former Conservative chancellor George Osborne added his voice to the backlash, saying Sunak had “mishandled” the situation.
Touting the Tories’ environmental record, he told Channel 4’s The Andrew Neil Show: “Why trash that because you don’t want to get on a plane to Egypt?”
Sharma, the outgoing COP26 president who was recently demoted from Cabinet, told the Sunday Times he was “pretty disappointed that the Prime Minister is not going”, saying attendance would send a signal about the UK’s “renewed commitment on this issue”.
The King’s reception at Buckingham Palace on November 4, on the eve of the UN conference in Egypt, will “bring together over 200 international business leaders, decision makers and NGOs to mark the end of the United Kingdom’s presidency of COP26 and look ahead to the COP27 summit in Egypt,” the Palace said.
Guests will include US climate envoy John Kerry and Sunak will “say a few words”.
The King is a long-time advocate on environmental causes and spoke at last year’s COP26 event in Glasgow.
But Downing Street on Friday said Liz Truss’s government had agreed with the monarch that it was not the “right occasion” for him to go to Egypt.
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