Hours after one of Boris Johnson’s longest standing allies quit, with a stinging rebuke of his judgment, the UK prime minister gathered shell-shocked staff in Downing Street to tell them “change is good”.
But while Johnson has tried to put his trademark optimistic spin on yet another week of turmoil, the ebullient persona that carried him to the top is now jarring with the reality of a desperate battle to cling to power.
He started the week with a plan to reinvigorate his premiership, marked by key announcements to flesh out his electoral promise to “level up” forgotten communities, make the most of Brexit and tackle a cost-of-living crisis.
Instead, he has been dragged to the brink after a senior civil servant criticised leadership failures over parties, which the police are still investigating, held in his office during the pandemic. The Daily Mirror reported on Friday that the police had a photograph of Johnson holding a can of beer at his birthday party during lockdown in June 2020.
In the fallout three other senior aides also left government and more Conservative MPs called on Johnson to resign.
Most ominously, key ministers suddenly appear less willing to give him their full backing. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak and health secretary Sajid Javid declined to defend the prime minister after he invoked infamous paedophile Jimmy Savile during a heated exchange in parliament about the party allegations with opposition leader Keir Starmer.
According to a front-page report in Saturday’s edition of The Times, Johnson’s cabinet is in “civil war”.
Still, Johnson ally Nadine Dorries was out with a defence on Saturday. The UK culture secretary said in a series of media appearances that Javid was “absolutely 100%” behind Johnson and that most Conservative MPs back their leader.
It’s very hard to see how Boris Johnson can re-establish the dominant position in politics that he had a few months ago. They’ve been shambolic in how they’ve handled this and I don’t see any sign that this is likely to improve.
— David Lidington, former prime minister Theresa May’s de facto deputy
“Regicide runs in the veins of my party,” Dorries said on Times Radio. “But what I would say is, there are 367 MPs. This is a small group.”
“It’s very hard to see how Boris Johnson can re-establish the dominant position in politics that he had a few months ago,” David Lidington, who served as former prime minister Theresa May’s de facto deputy, said on Friday. “They’ve been shambolic in how they’ve handled this and I don’t see any sign that this is likely to improve.”
Johnson’s decision to falsely accuse Starmer, a former director of public prosecutions, of allowing Savile to evade justice before his death in 2011 backfired spectacularly and bolstered the sense that the crisis engulfing the premier is largely of his own making.
It also robbed Johnson of the chance to brand the departure of senior aides on Thursday as a reset of his Downing Street operation. His office said the resignations of his chief of staff, communications director and principal private secretary were pre-planned and mutually agreed.
Yet the exit of Munira Mirza, the head of his policy unit and a close aide who has been at his side since he was mayor of London in 2008, blindsided Johnson. In a further blow, she blamed his “scurrilous” attack on Starmer.
One minister in Johnson’s government, who asked not to be identified, said the departure of senior aides had left the prime minister looking abandoned and without direction, even if some moves had been planned.
Among Conservative MPs the focus is increasingly on potential challengers to Johnson. Sunak raised eyebrows when he declared during a televised press conference that he “wouldn’t have said” Johnson’s Savile comment. On Friday Javid pointedly defended Starmer’s record when asked about the remark.
The question for the Tories — and Johnson — is whether those they regard as having their eye on the top job, including foreign secretary Liz Truss, will continue to wait or decide that delaying risks damaging their chances.
Johnson would face a vote on his leadership if 15% of his backbenchers — 54 MPs — submit letters calling for his resignation. At least 14 have so far publicly called on him to resign or said they’ve lost confidence in him, while the tally of letters is kept secret.
Johnson would face a vote on his leadership if 15% of his backbenchers — 54 MPs — submit letters calling for his resignation. At least 14 have so far publicly called on him to resign or said they’ve lost confidence in him, while the tally of letters is kept secret.
But as many Tory MPs have said they will wait for the police to finish their probe into the so-called partygate scandal or to see if Johnson delivers on a pledge to change his ways, some think it may take a senior figure making a move for the threshold to be reached.
One person familiar with the matter said some MPs are waiting to submit a letter until they are sure Johnson will lose a no-confidence vote.
A public denouncement of Johnson carries risks for challengers. It would be seen as a betrayal by grassroots Conservative Party members, who ultimately elect the leader and many of whom have a strong affection for the current prime minister.
In the meantime, Johnson is battling on. He installed former Sky executive and backbench MP Andrew Griffith as his new policy chief and promised rank-and-file Tory lawmakers more influence. Several MPs elected in 2019 said they are glad to see him taking action.
Yet the chaos is growing just as Johnson faces real-world problems beyond Westminster, including tensions with Russia over Ukraine.
The looming squeeze on living standards alone would be too much for a government to survive, even without the partygate fallout, according to Bronwen Maddox, director of the Institute for Government think-tank.
“He’s done all this other stuff on top, self-inflicted mistakes which have got people really furious,” she said. “It’s very, very hard to come back from this.”
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
— Bloomberg






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