South Wales Evening Post

Kwarteng: PM’S job is not under threat

-

BORIS Johnson will “absolutely” still be leader after the local elections no matter how dismal the results are for the Tories, a Cabinet member has insisted.

Kwasi Kwarteng said the Prime Minister’s leadership is not “at threat at all” as voters go to the polls with a new scandal of a pornwatchi­ng Conservati­ve on top of Partygate.

There were reports that former Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt could launch a leadership bid if Mr Johnson is forced from power in the wake of Thursday’s elections.

The fresh embarrassm­ent of Neil Parish’s resignatio­n came as activists canvas for votes for a Tory party led by a Prime Minister fined by police for breaching his own coronaviru­s laws.

Mr Kwarteng, the Business Secretary, yesterday told Sky’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday: “I don’t think his leadership is at threat at all, what he’s delivered is really a remarkable series of successes.

“I think Brexit, he delivered on that, the fact he was very widely appreciate­d in Ukraine, he’s been widely hailed as someone who has led the overseas effort to help Ukraine and also look at the vaccine rollout, that was a great bit of success.”

Pressed as to whether no matter what happened in the polls Mr Johnson was safe, he replied “absolutely”.

The Mail on Sunday reported that allies of Mr Hunt, who was also a long-standing health secretary, is ready to brand himself a “safe pair of hands” if the time comes to run for the Tory leadership.

Mr Kwarteng said: “Jeremy is a very capable colleague, he’s a good friend. I don’t know what he’s up to but as far as I’m concerned Boris Johnson is the right man by far to lead us into the next election.”

Mr Hunt, who was the strongest opponent to Mr Johnson when he won the leadership in 2019, has previously said how his ambition to lead the Tories has not “completely vanished”.

Polls in 200 local authoritie­s across Britain open on Thursday in a chance for voters to register their disapprova­l or their support for the Prime Minister.

Sir Keir Starmer will also be under pressure as a failure to make inroads will lead to questions over his ability to deliver Labour back to power.

Mr Johnson will hope voters prioritise his perceived successes, such as the vaccine rollout and Brexit, rather than the lockdown breaches and tax hikes amid a cost-of-living crisis.

He also released a statement trying to focus minds on bins, potholes and local councillor­s rather than national politics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom