Daily Mail

BAD BLOOD THAT LED SCORNED EX-PM TO WIELD THE STILETTO

- By Simon Walters

Tousting heresa Conservati­ve keenly from the is more done power, the May not pain bitter an by leader is of agony the being not when voters made the to ousted first feel the but all by Margaret after fellow he Thatcher was Tories. ignominiou­sly in 1974, a toppled truculent by sir Incredible edward sulk. heath By was 1990, nicknamed it was the Iron The Lady’s turn to be called a ‘backseat driver’ when she could not stop meddling in her successor John Major’s administra­tion.

since Mr Johnson ruthlessly removed her from Downing street 18 months ago, Mrs May has taken one or two pot shots at him in Parliament. Yesterday, she delivered a fullscale broadside against her successor in an article for the Daily Mail.

her florid attack, in which she accused a serving Prime Minister of ‘abandoning [Britain’s] position of global moral leadership’, dominated the airwaves yesterday and led to questions in Parliament.

her critique took aim at the ‘moral’ nature of Mr Johnson’s policies. This was no coincidenc­e. In 2018, Boris dramatical­ly resigned from her government following a Cabinet Brexit summit at Chequers, the Prime Minister’s country retreat.

Withdrawin­g his support was bad enough, but Boris went on to treat Mrs May with contempt. he told the then-prime minister to her face that trying to sell her Brexit deal to voters would be like ‘polishing a turd’, a vulgar remark that his apparatchi­ks gleewardly, fully leaked.

Two months later, Boris followed this with a devastatin­g speech in the Commons.

he called the Brexit deal that Mrs May had spent two long years negotiatin­g a ‘moral and intellectu­al humiliatio­n’. her aides were outraged.

‘The damned cheek of it!’ one said to me. ‘him, of all people, lecturing her on morals.’

Not even Boris’s staunchest defenders would try to claim that morality has always been his driving force, what with his extramarit­al lovers and children by a number of women.

SUCH has devoted nothing a remained lifestyle, like to Mrs her of May’s. husband course, utterly she is Philip 45 years since ago. they met as students

In her Mail article yesterday, Mrs May did not stop at questionin­g her successor’s political morals.

‘For too long,’ she wrote, ‘we have been sliding towards absolutism in internatio­nal affairs: if you are not 100 per cent for me then you must be 100 per cent against me... strong leadership knows when to compromise.’

This, of course, was an explicit dig at Donald Trump – but there is no doubt that Johnson was in her sights, too. But why now? What triggered Mrs May to sour relations so devastatin­gly and so publicly this week? There were signs that trouble lay between the two political heavyweigh­ts two months ago, when Mrs May rose to speak in a Commons debate on Covid.

Before she had completed her first sentence, the Prime Minister, sitting just a few feet away, walked out, in a flagrant breach of Parliament­ary etiquette.

Mrs May was momentaril­y silenced and grimaced awkbut then castigated Mr Johnson’s handling of the pandemic, accusing him of ‘picking data to suit his policy’. But though the seeds were sown long ago, I believe that it was the tumultuous events across the atlantic that finally prompted Mrs May into her historic and very public fusillade against the PM in yesterday’s Mail.

referring to the violent handover between Trump and Mr Biden this week, she wrote: ‘I know from experience that leaving power is not easy.’

Quite so: we all remember how, at a farewell press conference during the closing moments of her premiershi­p, Mrs May wept outside No 10’s black door.

The truth, however, is that bad blood between May and Johnson has long been festering.

as far back as summer 2016, when they were both grappling for the Conservati­ve leadership, Mrs May mocked Boris for having bungled the handling of London riots when he was the capital’s mayor five years earlier.

‘The last time Boris negotiated in europe,’ she causticall­y remarked, ‘he did a deal with the Germans and came back with three nearly-new water cannon.’

after Mr Johnson was crushed in

that leadership contest, his ambitions seemingly destroyed for ever, she kept her enemy close by giving him the consolatio­n prize of foreign secretary. But she also made it clear who was boss.

Four months after she became Prime Minister I nearly fell off my seat at an awards ceremony when she humiliated Mr Johnson, who was in the audience.

she seized on a remark he had made earlier at the event, comparing himself to an alsatian said to have been strangled by former deputy prime minister Michael heseltine. Looking at her foreign secretary, Mrs May quipped: ‘Boris, the dog was put down… when its master decided it wasn’t needed any more.’

Mrs May still has a reputation for being a rather timid vicar’s daughter. In fact, she knows how to wield a stiletto.

she once donned a high-visibility jacket and hard hat purely to mock former chancellor George Osborne, and on another occasion joked that she ‘retched’ when David Cameron had handed a knighthood to his former communicat­ions chief. Though her feud with Boris does not yet run as deep as the enmity between heath and Thatcher, there are some striking similariti­es. heath loathed Mrs Thatcher, who had served as his education secretary, largely because she dumped him so unceremoni­ously after seizing the leadership.

But their personal relations were always icy, and pro- european heath despised her hostility to Brussels. he was a Conservati­ve moderate who believed in ruling by consensus, though all attempts to do so failed.

after years of drift, his party threw him out in favour of a charismati­c right-wing risk-taker who never shied from confrontat­ion – and who went on to win a landslide election and make history. see any parallels today? In the end, it was not until 1999, 24 years after Mrs Thatcher wrested the Tory leadership from heath, that the pair finally buried the hatchet at a London banquet to honour the 20th anniversar­y of her first election win.

If it takes as long for Mrs May and Mr Johnson to kiss and make up, they will not break bread until 2043

In the interests of the country, both should swallow their pride and do it now.

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 ??  ?? Festering feud: Boris Johnson and Theresa May
Festering feud: Boris Johnson and Theresa May
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