Coventry Telegraph

Anton ‘won’t quit’

- Chancellor Philip Hammond

ANTON DU BEKE has hit back at “absolute rubbish” rumours that he is leaving Strictly Come Dancing. The dancer and his celebrity partner Susannah Constantin­e, left, were the first couple to leave the 2018 series. CHANCELLOR Philip Hammond has launched a scathing attack on Boris Johnson, dismissing the former foreign secretary’s Brexit proposals as “fantasy world” and repeatedly saying he does not expect him to become prime minister.

The Chancellor mounted a sustained assault on his former Cabinet colleague in a newspaper interview and a series of broadcast appearance­s.

Asked by the Daily Mail whether Mr Johnson could become prime minister, Mr Hammond said: “I don’t expect it to happen,” and suggested Mr Johnson could not do “grown-up politics”.

He went on to attack the flamboyant Brexiteer for having “no grasp of detail” on complex subjects like Brexit, suggesting his greatest achievemen­t to date had been introducin­g the “Boris Bike” cycle scheme while London mayor.

The attack came at the end of the first day of the Conservati­ve Party’s annual conference in Birmingham in which its fault lines over Brexit were exposed with just weeks to go to settle a withdrawal deal with Brussels.

Mr Johnson had used a Sunday Times interview to describe Mrs May’s Brexit policy as “deranged” and “prepostero­us”. In remarks that fuelled speculatio­n about his leadership ambitions, the man who spearheade­d the Leave campaign contrasted his position on Brexit with that of Theresa May, who backed Remain, saying: “Unlike the Prime Minister, I fought for this.”

Mr Johnson is not speaking from the stage at this year’s conference, after walking out of Cabinet in July in protest at the plan agreed at Chequers for the UK’s future relationsh­ip with the EU.

But his scheduled speech on the fringe of the gathering today is the most hotly-anticipate­d event of the four-day conference, with widespread expectatio­ns he will use it to step up his assault on the PM’s plans.

In a round of broadcast interviews on yesterday, Mr Hammond was repeatedly asked whether Mr Johnson could ever become prime minister, and stated several times: “I don’t believe that will happen.”

He told Sky News: “Of course, Boris is a big personalit­y, nobody is denying that. What I’m saying is that the business of government is a process of attention to detail, follow-through, lots of hard work.

“It isn’t just about making flamboyant statements and big announceme­nts, it’s about getting things done.”

He dismissed the former foreign secretary’s call for the UK to negotiate a “superCanad­a” free trade agreement with the EU.

“It isn’t about taking back control, it’s about fantasy world,” Mr Hammond said, arguing that the EU had made clear that a Canadian-style FTA covering the whole UK was not on the table, as Northern Ireland could not be included.”

Mr Hammond, who supported Remain in the referendum, insisted that he believes in Brexit and thinks there is “a high chance” a version of the Chequers plan will be agreed. He added he was “not having sleepless nights” over the risk of a no-deal Brexit.

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