New Straits Times

BREXIT OUTCASTS TAKE ON PM

Ex-Tories hope to deny Conservati­ves, Johnson of victory

-

ONLY a few months ago, David Gauke was a Conservati­ve minister. Now he’s standing in Britain’s election as an independen­t, hoping to deprive the party and its prime minister of victory.

“With a majority, Boris Johnson would be able to proceed with a reckless course of action over Brexit,” said Gauke as he handed out leaflets on a damp afternoon in Tring, a market town in southern England.

Gauke quit as justice minister in July when Johnson became Conservati­ve leader, in protest over his threat to leave the European Union without a deal with Brussels.

Two months later, Johnson expelled Gauke and 20 other MPs from the party for trying to block him in Parliament, in the process losing his majority in the House of Commons.

Most of the rebels have since been readmitted or retired, but Gauke and two others are now standing against the Tories in their old constituen­cies on Dec 12.

Gauke admits he is in a “very strange” position, but it reflects the turbulence in British politics since the historic 2016 Brexit referendum.

Both the Conservati­ves and main opposition Labour party have been split over their EU strategy, and several MPs from both have defected to the anti-Brexit Liberal Democrats in recent months.

Gauke backed a previous exit deal but now believes a new EU referendum is the only way to address the divisive issue — and hopes the majority of his constituen­ts who opposed Brexit in 2016 will support him.

Having been a Tory MP for 14 years and campaigned for the party in every election since 1987, he has no time for Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who also wants a new referendum.

As he pounds the pavements in Southwest Hertfordsh­ire, a seat he won with 58 per cent of the vote in 2017, he emphasises that he would be an independen­t voice.

One woman swears as she walks past on Tring’s High Street, but most people are polite and several stop to chat, despite the drizzle.

“I admire his courage,” said Carole Niven, a 66-year-old photograph­er, fixing a campaign sticker to her coat.

Gauke admits the election is longer hours and more work than before, when he was backed by the Conservati­ve party machine and took his seat for granted.

Today, he is accompanie­d by just one local volunteer, a member of the local Lib Dems.

“I’m the underdog,” he concedes — polling indicates he will not keep his seat.

But he adds: “I’m loving every minute of it!”

A few miles south, through the glorious autumnal woods of the Chiltern Hills, Gauke’s former Tory colleague Dominic Grieve is also upbeat about running as an independen­t.

“I have no idea if I’ll win.

“But it might just happen,” the former attorney-general said in the picturesqu­e town of Marlow, on the banks of the River Thames.

The weather here is even worse, the pouring rain dripping off his flat cap and waxed cotton jacket, but Grieve is a man on a mission.

Johnson “is wholly unsuitable to hold high office, and whose character and temperamen­t suggest to me that he is, I’m afraid, inherently dishonest”, he said.

Grieve has led highly successful efforts in Parliament to block a “no deal” Brexit, and like Gauke, hopes his call for a second referendum will appeal in his Remain-backing seat.

“I’m not mad. I’m not going to facilitate an extremist left-wing politician taking power,” he said, referring to accusation­s he will let in Corbyn’s Labour.

But he wants to “moderate” Johnson’s plans for Brexit, which he described as “the worst piece of self-harm this country has engaged in peacetime”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia