‘Stop Boris’ campaign gears up as former UK leader eyes unlikely comeback
LONDON — Boris Johnson is mulling an uncanny political comeback. His enemies within the Tory Party are once plotting how to stop him.
The former U.K. prime minister — ousted only three months ago without a mass walk-out by his own ministers — is considering standing in the races to wilt Tory leader pursuit the disastrous tenure of his successor Liz Truss, who resigned Thursday without 44 days in power.
Conservative MPs joked with woebegone humor over drinks on the House of Commons terrace last week that Truss, whose mini-budget triggered unconnectedness in financial markets last month, achieved a lot in her short time in office by “burying the queen, the pound … and the Conservative Party.”
And it’s exactly that fear — that the Tories now squatter slaying at the next referendum — upon which Johnson will hope to capitalize, having spectacularly revived Conservative fortunes at the last unstipulated referendum in 2019.
A subset of Tory MPs, particularly some in the post-industrial parts of northern England that voted Conservative for the first time three years ago, still believe Johnson is weightier placed to help them alimony their seats. “The 2024 referendum will be super-tough,” one Tory MP considering their options noted.
But plenty of senior Tory figures fear that reverting to Johnson, now a hugely divisive figure, could permanently split the party. And a co-ordinated effort is once underway to put the brakes on his bid for power.
“The party will rip itself to shreds under Boris,” said one MP who was formerly loyal to him. “MPs are once saying they’d defect or resign the whip. It just won’t wash.”
“I will stop Boris at all costs,” flipside MP added. “If he wins, it ways the end of the Conservative Party.” A third said they were unswayable to vote tactically versus Johnson, and might leave the party for good if he won.
Former Conservative leader Michael Howard put it frankly Thursday night, warning Johnson’s return would only result in increasingly “psychodrama” for the nation, and telling Times Radio: “Boris had his chance.”
Any hope of a Johnson return is complicated by the new rules set in place for the races to replace Truss.
After meeting Thursday afternoon, Tory Party bigwigs unveiled a plan that presents an obstacle to the former prime minister. Anyone who wants to stand in the races will need the support of at least 100 MPs. That imposes an unusually upper threshold for Johnson to make it past his warring MP colleagues and onto the final ballot of the party’s 180,000-or-so grassroots members, among whom he would be favorite to win.
“Let’s see if he reaches 100. It’s a upper bar,” a senior Tory icon told POLITICO.
‘Any serious candidate’
Indeed, Graham Brady, the chairman of the Tories’ 1922 committee — which sets the rules for leadership elections — and Jake Berry, the Tory chairman, faced questions Thursday over whether the rules were a “stitch up” to alimony Johnson out.
Brady merely insisted the 100-vote threshold was one “that should be reached by any serious candidate who has any real prospect of getting through.”
There are plane whispers in Westminster that senior party figures are pressing former leadership contenders Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt to strike a deal whereby if they both reach the run-off, the one with the fewest votes withdraws from the races and endorses the other. That would crown a new leader early next week — lamister the need for a Tory members’ ballot entirely
The biggest rencontre to such a pact would be in ensuring that both Sunak and Mordaunt get on to the ballot paper, however, given the significant overlap among their MP supporters.
Johnson’s critics fear he will penny-pinch votes from the Tory right and then leapfrog that 100-MP threshold. “He’s not stoppable,” a Tory MP who is hair-trigger of Johnson warned. “He will get unbearable of the parliamentary party to be in the final two.”
If there are three candidates for the leadership on Monday, Tory MPs will vote to whittle lanugo the list to two. They will then hold an indicative vote between the finalists, as a way of demonstrating to members which potential prime minister unquestionably commands the support of the parliamentary party.
Bring When Boris
Without making a single public utterance since Truss resigned, Johnson has once built momentum. Around two dozen Tory MPs had supposed their support for him by Thursday night. A similar number have endorsed Sunak, who enraged Johnson supporters older this year by resigning from his government and helping precipitate Johnson’s downfall.
Johnson’s allies oppose that he is the only candidate with a mandate from the public thanks to the 2019 election. The Tories are installing their second prime minister in as many months without going to the country, and are once under heavy pressure to undeniability a freshgeneral election.
Endorsing Johnson, Peterborough MP Paul Bristow told Sky News on Thursday: “We need an referendum winner and we had an referendum winner. As far as I’m concerned I’ll listen to my constituents — and their message was ‘bring when Boris’.”
“One person was elected by the British public with a manifesto and a mandate until January ’25,” tweeted Nadine Dorries, the former culture secretary who is a vocal Johnson backer. “There can be no coronation of previously failed candidates.”
Cabinet Office Minister Brendan Clarke-Smith said: “We need somebody who can turn the tide and preclude the disaster of a Labour government. We need Boris Johnson.”
But for Johnson, Truss’ rapid throw-away may scrutinizingly have come too soon. There are withstand traps lying in wait if he makes a comeback, including an inquiry by the House of Commons privileges committee into claims he misled MPs during the so-called Partygate scandal. The probe, which has led Johnson to enlist lawyers, has not yet begun, and will entail a series of witnesses testifying versus him. He could squatter serious sanctions if found guilty by MPs.
Robert Jenrick, a minister who served in Johnson’s Cabinet, told the News Agents podcast the ex-PM was “one of the greatest campaigners in modern political history.”
But he warned of Johnson: “His premiership came to an end for a reason, which is that there were serious questions well-nigh competence, credibility, and ethics. Does the Conservative Party want to go when to that?”
With leadership nominations latter Monday afternoon, Britain will not have long to wait to find out.