PM’s adviser on ethnic minorities Samuel Kasumu QUITS
No10 frantically plays down dramatic resignation of PM’s adviser on ethnic minorities amid backlash at ‘whitewash’ race report – saying Samuel Kasumu planned to leave for ‘months’ as Boris Johnson praises his ‘great work’ on vaccine take-up
- The PM’s most senior black adviser Samuel Kasumu is understood to be leaving
- Departure emerged after controversial race report but sources insisted no link
- Huge row over findings of the race report which was branded ‘culturally deaf’
Downing Street today frantically played down the resignation of the PM’s most senior black aide as ministers faced backlash over a ‘whitewash’ race report.
Boris Johnson heaped praise on Samuel Kasumu’s ‘great’ work in encouraging vaccine take-up among ethnic minorities after it emerged he is leaving No10.
The news surfaced after the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities published a controversial study on inequality in Britain.
But a spokesman for the PM said Mr Kasumu had planned to go for ‘months’, and will be staying until May.
‘Any suggestion that this decision has been made this week or that this is linked to the CRED report is completely inaccurate,’ the spokesman said.
Mr Kasumu had tendered his resignation in February, penning a letter warning that ministers were pursuing a ‘politics steeped in division’ and voicing ‘concern’ about how equalities minister Kemi Badenoch handled a spat with a journalist. At that stage he was talked out of going, even though the letter was leaked.
The 33-year-old informed No10 colleagues yesterday that he was leaving, according to Politico.
Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi is believed to have tried unsuccessfully to persuade Mr Kasumu to change his mind again.
During a visit to Middlesbrough, Mr Johnson told reporters: ‘I worked very closely with Samuel in the last year or so and he’s done some great stuff.
‘I thank him very much, particularly on helping to encourage vaccine take-up amongst more hesitant groups and communities. And, actually, we’re seeing some real success there.
‘It is true that different groups have been coming forward at different paces, everybody is increasing their take-ups, so I thank him very much for that.’
The race report, which was months in the making and produced by a group of 12 experts – only one of whom was white – concluded that there was no evidence of institutional racism in this country.
Overseen by chair Dr Tony Sewell, its findings were branded a ‘whitewash’ by the Left, but welcomed by other campaigners.
Samuel Kasumu, who advised Boris Johnson on ethnic minorities is understood to have handed in his resignation after long-running tensions
Boris Johnson (pictured on a visit to Middlesbrough today) heaped praise on Mr Kasumu’s ‘great’ work in encouraging vaccine take-up among ethnic minorities after it emerged he is leaving No10
Overseen by chair Dr Tony Sewell, the findings from the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities were branded a ‘whitewash’ by the Left, but welcomed by other campaigners
The report, commissioned by the Prime Minister after last year’s Black Lives Matter protests, said Britain was no longer a country where the ‘system is deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities’.
The report said factors such as geography, family influence, socio-economic background, culture and religion all impacted life chances more than racism, and concluded the UK was a ‘beacon’ to the world as a successful multi-ethnic nation which displayed much more tolerance than its neighbours.
But unions said the report denied the experiences of black and minority ethnic workers.
Labour justice spokesman David Lammy said black Britons were being ‘gaslighted’ and called the report an insult to anyone in Britain who had experienced structural racism.
The report’s authors were also accused of trying to put a ‘positive spin on slavery’ after they called on schools to use history lessons to ‘tell the multiple, nuanced stories of the contributions made by different groups that have made this country the one it is today’.
In his foreword, Dr Sewell said there was a new story to be told about the ‘slave period’ and about how ‘culturally African people transformed themselves into a remodelled African/Britain’.
But Halima Begum, chief executive of the Runnymede Trust, a race equality think-tank, said: ‘I’m absolutely flabbergasted to see the slave trade apparently redefined as ‘the Caribbean Experience’; as though it’s something Thomas Cook should be selling – a one-way shackled cruise to purgatory.
‘The cultural deafness of this report is only going to become clearer in the coming days and weeks.’
But Dr Sewell said it was ‘absurd to suggest that the commission is trying to downplay the evil of the slave trade’.
Mr Johnson insisted today there are ‘serious issues that our society faces to do with racism’ and that work needed to be done to ‘fix it’.
And he suggested the government will not agree with ‘everything’ in the report’s conclusions.
‘Look, this is a very interesting piece of work,’ he said.
‘I don’t say the Government is going to agree with absolutely everything in it, but it has some original and stimulating work in it that I think people need to read and to consider.
‘There are very serious issues that our society faces to do with racism that we need to address.
‘We’ve got to do more to fix it, we need to understand the severity of the problem, and we’re going to be looking at all the ideas that they have put forward, and we’ll be making our response.’
Duwayne Brooks, a friend of Stephen Lawrence, said he agreed that not all disparities in the UK were caused by racism.
The activist told Times Radio: ‘What the report is doing is comparing life for the ethnic minorities in Britain, in comparison to the European countries, where life would be much, much worse than how it is today.’
He added: ‘It’s not as simple to just say that the black people of Britain cannot get jobs because they’re black.
‘And that’s what people want the report to say.’
Baroness Kishwer Falkner, chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, added: ‘This report rightly identifies the varied causes of disparities and by making recommendations to address them gives the Government the opportunity to design policy targeting the sources of inequality.’
Mr Kasumu wrote a resignation letter from his job, paid up to £75,000 a year, in February.
Although he later retracted it, the BBC obtained a copy.
In it, Mr Kasumu accused the Conservative Party of pursuing ‘a politics steeped in division’ and suggested Equalities Minister Kemi Badenoch may have broken the ministerial code in her public spat with a journalist.
He wrote: ‘I fear for what may become of the party in the future by choosing to pursue a politics steeped in division.’
The former Conservative activist and councillor who grew up in Barnet, north London, said ‘the damage that is often caused by our actions is not much considered’, adding: ‘As someone that has spent his whole adult life serving others, that tension has been at times unbearable.’
He reportedly described the actions of Ms Badenoch as ‘concerning’.
Ms Badenoch accused HuffPost reporter Nadine White of ‘creepy and bizarre’ behaviour after the journalist contacted her requesting a comment for a story.
The minister posted screenshots of Ms White’s emails online sparking a backlash against the reporter.
Mr Kasumu apparently notified the Prime Minister’s chief of staff, Dan Rosenfield, that he will be leaving last week, and told colleagues yesterday.
Shadow equalities secretary Marsha de Cordova said: ‘To have your most senior advisor on ethnic minorities quit as you publish a so-called landmark report on race in the UK is telling of how far removed the Tories are from the everyday lived experiences of Black, Asian and ethnic minority people.
‘Their divisive report appears to glorify slavery and suggests that institutional racism does not exist despite the evidence to the contrary.
In a resignation letter leaked to the BBC in February but later retracted, Mr Kasumu voiced ‘concern’ about the actions of equalities minister Kemi Badenoch (left), who launched an online tirade against HuffPost reporter Nadine White (right)
‘It is no wonder they are losing the expertise from their team.’
Yesterday Dr Sewell, who insisted that the commission simply hadn’t found evidence of institutional racism in Britain, said some communities were haunted by historic racism and there was a ‘reluctance to acknowledge that the UK had become open and fairer’.
He said the review found some evidence of bias, but often it was a perception that the wider society could not be trusted.
NHS Providers said it disagreed with the report’s conclusions and said there was ‘clear and unmistakable’ evidence that NHS ethnic minority staff had worse experiences and faced more barriers than white counterparts.
Sabby Dhalu, of Stand Up To Racism, said: ‘Suggesting Britain should be regarded as a ‘model for other white-majority countries’ is an insult to all those who lost their lives due to racism.’
But Chancellor Rishi Sunak said progress had been made in tackling racism, telling ITV’s Peston: ‘If I think about the things that happened to me when I was a kid, I can’t imagine those things happening to me now.’
The 264-page report also called on ministers to tackle online abuse, lengthen the school day to help disadvantaged pupils, force police to switch on body cameras during stop-and-search encounters, and establish an independent body to target health disparities.
The Prime Minister said the Government will consider the recommendations.
The landmark review found children from many ethnic minorities do as well or better at school than white pupils
The review highlighted the different fortunes of ethnic groups, pointing out that white British boys from poorer backgrounds are among the most disadvantaged. These figures show the difference between the mean score for the group and the grand mean score across all pupils – which is equivalent to zero