Daily Mail

May under pressure to sack Spreadshee­t Phil

Leave MPs fear Chancellor is trying to stall Brexit negotiatio­ns PM ‘is prepared to fire Boris’ – but his allies say he’ll refuse to go

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor j.stevens@dailymail.co.uk

CONSERVATI­VE MPs last night demanded Theresa May sack Philip Hammond for dragging his feet over Brexit as part of a reshuffle to reassert her authority.

The Prime Minister yesterday vowed she would not ‘hide from a challenge’ amid speculatio­n she could oust Boris Johnson in a shake-up of her Cabinet after she saw off a botched coup in the wake of her conference speech.

But Mr Johnson’s allies said he would ‘just say no’ if Mrs May tried to demote him, it was reported last night.

She is instead being urged by Brexit- supporting MPs to remove the Chancellor, who they accused of being overly pessimisti­c about Britain’s departure from the EU and constraini­ng efforts to relaunch her premiershi­p.

In her first interview since her conference speech was blighted by a persistent cough and a prankster who handed her a fake P45, Mrs May yesterday admitted it was an ‘uncomforta­ble’ time but insisted she never considered abandoning the address because she is ‘not someone who gives up’.

She fuelled rumours she could seek to bolster her position by holding a reshuffle in the coming weeks as she suggested she was prepared to either sack or demote Mr Johnson.

Asked what she might do with the Foreign Secretary, Mrs May told The Sunday Times: ‘It has never been my style to hide from a challenge and I’m not going to start now.

‘I’m the PM, and part of my job is to make sure I always have the best people in my Cabinet, to make the most of the wealth of talent available to me in the party.’

Her comments were met with fury from Mr Johnson’s supporters, with one saying removing him as Foreign Secretary would go down ‘like a bucket of cold sick’ with Brexiteers, The Daily Telegraph reported.

Last night Mrs May faced growing pressure to use a reshuffle to remove Mr Hammond, who is nicknamed ‘ Spreadshee­t Phil’ for his dry demeanour, before next month’s Budget.

Critics of the Chancellor have accused him of limiting the ambition of the Government’s domestic policy agenda and attempting to keep Britain closely tied to the EU for years after Brexit. Ahead of the June election, Mrs May had planned to sack Mr Hammond.

Yesterday, Nadine Dorries, who is a supporter of Mr Johnson, became the first backbenche­r to publicly call on the Prime Minister to revive her plan. She told ITV’s Peston on Sunday: ‘If I were the Prime Minister, the person I would be demoting or certainly sacking would be Philip Hammond.

‘She very much wanted to do that before the election was called because I don’t think he’s been completely on board. I think he’s been deliberate­ly trying to make the Brexit negotiatio­ns difficult, stall them, obfuscate the issues, I just don’t think he’s been 100 per cent on board.’

Another Tory MP added last night: ‘The backbenche­rs are livid with Hammond because he pushed and shoved over the summer to water down Brexit. But also, everybody thinks he is too pessimisti­c. We want to be upbeat and we just don’t think he’s helping.’ A senior Tory backbenche­r said both Mr Johnson and Mr Hammond were ‘on probation’, and there would be a ‘tit for tat battle’ with a push for the Chancellor to be removed by Brexiteers if the ‘Remoaners’ succeeded in getting rid of the Foreign Secretary.

Referring to how Mr Hammond handed Mrs May a cough sweet as she struggled to give her conference speech on Wednesday, he added: ‘The Chancellor is not just there to provide Strepsils. The Not giving up: Theresa May in her constituen­cy yesterday authority sits with the PM and if he is not willing to help deliver her agenda on Brexit or at home, she should remove him.’

But an ally of Mr Hammond last night rejected the criticism. He said: ‘Just last week Nadine was calling on her fellow MPs to “turn their fire on the Labour Party and Jeremy Corbyn”.

‘It would be helpful for her to heed her own advice.’

Former prime minister Sir John Major yesterday hit out at the ‘disloyal’ behaviour of some Tories who are ‘driven by their own personal agenda’ – comments viewed as a slapdown to Mr Johnson, who overshadow­ed both Mrs May’s Brexit speech in Florence last month and the start of the party’s conference.

However, Mr Johnson used a Sunday Telegraph column to pledge loyalty to Mrs May.

Addressing plotters hoping the Prime Minister will step down, he wrote: ‘What do you think you are doing, you nutters?’

Former deputy prime minister Lord Heseltine said it would be a high-stakes gamble for Mrs May to sack the Foreign Secretary.

‘He won’t go quietly,’ he told Radio 4’s The World This Weekend. Later when asked where Mrs May should put Mr Johnson, he told Sky News: ‘Mongolia, somewhere like that.’

Culture Secretary Karen Bradley last night played down the need for a change in personnel around the Cabinet table. She told BBC Radio 5 Live: ‘We had a reshuffle after the referendum result when we saw a change of leader, that’s less than 18 months ago.’

Mrs May yesterday showed she was carrying on with business as usual, posting pictures of herself campaignin­g in her Maidenhead constituen­cy on Twitter. ‘Out on the doorstep again this weekend,’ she wrote. ‘A really good chance to show how we truly are building a country that works for everyone.’

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