Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Feuding in Downing Street as UK faces COVID-19, Brexit challenges

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LONDON, United Kingdom — As British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces the challenges of soaring virus deaths and looming Brexit talks, two of his closest aides have resigned amid reports of bitter infighting.

The British prime minister’s top aide and the organiser of the “Vote Leave” campaign, Dominic Cummings, walked out of Downing Street on Friday holding a cardboard box.

This came a day after the resignatio­n of Johnson’s Communicat­ions Director Lee Cain, a close Cummings ally who also worked on the “Leave” side of the 2016 referendum.

While Cain was little-known to the British public, Cummings became massively unpopular in May when he failed to apologise for violating the Government’s strict novel coronaviru­s lockdown measures with lengthy road trips, while Johnson took his side.

Cummings had said he expected to stay until the end of the year and the final stage of Brexit.

After Johnson reshuffled his senior aides, some senior Tories said they hoped to see less “confrontat­ional” relations between the prime minister and Members of Parliament (MPS).

But the Guardian called the sudden departures a “political pantomime”, as the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n (BBC) reported that the men would work out their notice at home.

Former Brexit Secretary David Davies in an interview with BBC television on Saturday alleged that Cummings’ relationsh­ip with Johnson “fell off a cliff” after the prime minister’s newly appointed spokeswoma­n, Allegra Stratton, and the prime minister’s fiancée Carrie Symonds “turned against him”.

Davies referred to Cummings’ “very confrontat­ional style”.

The Daily Mail reported sources as saying that Johnson showed Cummings texts allegedly proving he had briefed against Symonds, formerly the head of communicat­ions for the Conservati­ve Party.

The BBC reported that Cain resigned after opposition among MPS and ministers to his potential promotion to Johnson’s chief of staff, while a source said Symonds had also spoken out against this.

Some MPS suggested that the departure of hard-line Brexiteers might lead to Britain taking a softer stance in negotiatio­ns, especially after the US election defeat of Donald Trump, an ally of Johnson.

But those involved in crunch post-brexit trade talks in the coming week insisted they would not be affected.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney told Sky News yesterday that the drama had caused “huge distractio­ns for Number 10, but they’re not distractio­ns for the EU”.

“I don’t think the departure of Dominic Cummings makes any particular impact on the negotiatio­ns,” British Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice told Sky News, stressing the talks had been led from the start by Britain’s chief negotiator, David Frost.

“For those of us in the Cabinet, we don’t tend to immerse ourselves in the gossip of who said what to who,” Eustice added.

Others in Britain criticised Johnson’s team for their timing, however.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey told the BBC it was “scandalous” that, amid the pandemic, record redundanci­es and Brexit talks, “people in Number 10 around the prime minister are arguing and jockeying for position”.

Labour shadow health minister Jonathan Ashworth tweeted that as Britain’s death toll from the novel coronaviru­s reached 50,000, “the preoccupat­ion of Boris Johnson is his squabbling spin doctors”.

The Sun tabloid wrote in an editorial: “This is not the hour for national news to be dominated by office feuds.”

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