Boris Johnson considering running again to be PM, say allies
Boris #Boris
Boris Johnson is considering running again to be UK prime minister after Liz Truss’s dramatic resignation, with rightwing Conservative MPs and party donors already backing his nascent campaign.
The former PM, who quit in disgrace in July following a series of scandals that left his personal integrity in tatters, was expected to fly back from the Caribbean where he has been on holiday with his family.
One ally told the Guardian that Johnson felt it was in the “national interest” for him to stage a return. Another said the Tory heavyweight felt his premiership had been unfairly “cut off before its time” and that he still had plenty to do at No 10.
However, the Conservative party announcement that the threshold to reach the ballot paper would be the support of 100 MPs made the prospect of Johnson running again look less likely, with some Tory MPs suggesting he could be wasting his energy by running.
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A former minister, who is backing the former chancellor Rishi Sunak, said he believed it was highly unlikely Johnson would run. “The brutal truth for Boris is that his support has not shifted at all since he was ousted. Then he had roughly 40 MPs still backing him, maybe 20 more are soft votes.
“I cannot see him getting more than 60 votes so … he’s done. He will say he is grandly not putting himself forward for the good of the nation because he knows he’ll get stuffed.”
Team Rishi is preparing a coordinated push of MPs to tweet in support this evening, when he is expected to get a flood of declarations. “It will all be over by Monday night,” one ally predicted.
As a deeply divisive figure within the parliamentary party, who has an inquiry into the Partygate affair still hanging over him, Johnson remains popular with the Tory grassroots, who could get a say in the process of choosing a new leader. A YouGov poll earlier this week found 32% put him as their top candidate, ahead of Sunak at 23%.
MPs said they believed the influence of the rightwing ERG faction of the party, which previously backed Johnson, was “greatly diminished” by the collapse of Truss.
“It is very hard to see how anyone on the right of the party comes through now,” one long-serving Tory said. “But you will need people like Priti [Patel] in cabinet. If it’s all one nation types it collapses again in six months.”
The prospect of Johnson bidding for the top job sent many moderate Tory MPs into paroxysms of despair, and polling showed he remained unpopular with huge swaths of the public.
In an interview with LBC’s Andrew Marr, the former cabinet minister David Davis told Johnson: “Go back to the beach” while other Conservatives variously described the former prime minister as “electorally toxic”, “dangerous for democracy” and “Labour’s secret weapon”.
Former minister David Davis tells Boris Johnson to ‘go back to the beach’ – video
The veteran Tory MP Sir Roger Gale said: “We need to remember that Mr Johnson is still under investigation by the privileges committee for potentially misleading the House. Until that investigation is complete and he is found guilty or cleared, there should be no possibility of him returning to government.”
One senior MP said that a Johnson revival could lead to a spate of byelections with seats lost to Labour or the Lib Dems, undermining his premiership. “Plenty of colleagues would just give up or resign or not re-stand,” they predicted. Another MP told the Guardian: “If this happens I will immediately defect to the Labour party.”
One source close to Johnson claimed Tory donors had already been approached about funding a potential campaign, and that wealthy party backers had discussed the option at the Conservative conference earlier this month. “They actually buy into this hype that he will be back,” they said.
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Johnson was ousted by his own cabinet after a string of scandals, including his attempt to change parliamentary rules to get Tory MP Owen Paterson off the hook for breaching lobbying rules, a series of law-breaking Downing Street parties on his watch during the Covid lockdown, and the Chris Pincher sexual harassment row.
However, his own MPs feared he was also losing the support of many first-time Tory voters in the “red wall” for failing to deliver on levelling up, despite it being a flagship election pledge, along with a string of other promises.
A number of rightwing Tory MPs who were promoted under Johnson came out to support him running again. His parliamentary private secretary, James Duddridge, tweeted: “I hope you enjoyed your holiday boss. Time to come back. Few issues at the office that need addressing.”
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His most outspoken supporter, the former culture secretary Nadine Dorries, said: “One person was elected by the British public with a manifesto and a mandate until January 2025. If Liz Truss is no longer PM there can be no coronation of previously failed candidates. MPs must demand return of Boris Johnson – if not it has to be leadership election or a general election.”
The Tory MP Andrew Stephenson, the party’s chair during the last leadership contest, said: “I received countless emails from Conservative members wanting Boris on the ballot. Constitutionally that was impossible. Now it isn’t.”
One minister told the Guardian: “The members are going to be rightly very angry. I’m afraid there is only one alternative who would command the support of members and that is Boris. They will want their say and that will be their choice. If the party imposes Rishi we will see mass resignations.”
Another former minister said: “The point is there is no time for an amateur, which rules out Penny [Mordaunt] and Kemi [Badenoch]. It has to be Rishi or Boris. And can you imagine how it would look if we imposed the loser on our members?”
One Tory donor, Maurizio Bragagni, who has given £650,000 to the party, told the Guardian: “If we have to go back to a leadership contest the only solution is the Conservative party members to choose Rishi, or bring back Boris.”