The Daily Telegraph

Amid apocalypti­c polling, the question of leadership is again the talk of the Tory tearoom

- By Camilla Tominey ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Rumours that Boris Johnson has submitted a bid for a £30,000 replica of No10’s famous front door are unlikely to surprise those who remember the former PM comparing himself to Cincinnatu­s, that resurgent Roman, in his resignatio­n speech.

According to The Sun, the self-styled “World King” is so nostalgic about life in Downing Street that he is gunning to own the prop, being auctioned by Bonhams next month with a host of other items featured in hit Netflix series The Crown. His people claim the story is “rubbish”.

As Rishi Sunak faces another test of his premiershi­p with the third reading of his controvers­ial Rwanda Bill this week, he could arguably do without any blond-haired distractio­ns. The trouble for Mr Sunak, however, is that amid apocalypti­c Yougov polling for the Tories – and his own nose-diving approval ratings – the question of leadership has once again surfaced.

Isaac Levido, the Conservati­ves’ election campaign manager, told fractious Tory MPS to unite or die at Monday night’s meeting of the 1922 backbench committee. “Let me be clear: divided parties fail,” he added, pointing out that the “don’t know” voters were still winnable. He is understood to have delivered a similar message to the Cabinet on Sunday.

Clearly furious at the involvemen­t of Lord Frost, the former Brexit secretary, in the Yougov survey – published by The Telegraph on Sunday night and revealing that the Tories are heading for a 1997-style election wipeout – Mr Levido suggested those who commission­ed the polling “seem to be intent on underminin­g this Government and our party”.

Writing for The Telegraph, Lord Frost, a close ally of Mr Johnson, described the findings as “stunningly awful” for the party and said a combinatio­n of tactical voting and any decision by Nigel Farage to return to frontline politics could leave the Conservati­ves facing “an extinction event”. Adding that the only way to avoid the likely defeat was “to be as tough as it takes on immigratio­n”, he also called for income tax cuts, an end to the renewables tax on energy costs “and much more”.

It has hardly gone unnoticed in No10 that as Mr Sunak’s approval rating has tanked to minus 30, according to the latest Opinium polling, some of those opposing him on Rwanda are rising up the ranks as potential successors. Kemi Badenoch, the Business Secretary, who is topping Conservati­vehome’s leadership survey, is thought to be among those urging him to harden up the Rwanda legislatio­n. Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, has also expressed her dissatisfa­ction with the proposed law as it currently stands, along with sixth-placed Robert Jenrick, the former immigratio­n minister. While Boris-backer Andrea Jenkyns might be the only Tory backbenche­r who admitted to submitting a letter of no confidence in Mr Sunak and this week doubled down on her call for a “new and true Conservati­ve leader”, the future stewardshi­p of the party is once again the talk of the Tory tearoom.

It comes after the PM’S authority was challenged on Monday night when two deputy chairmen of the party announced they would rebel over the Rwanda Bill. Lee Anderson and Brendan Clarke-smith said they had signed rebel amendments to toughen up the legislatio­n, effectivel­y challengin­g him to sack them from their party posts. Both MPS, former Johnson allies, resigned last night. As one Tory insider explained: “Even if the party were to pivot now and come up with a radical plan to win back voters, there are doubts over whether [Sunak] is the right person to communicat­e it. There are really only two politician­s with enough cutthrough on the Right – Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage.”

The Yougov poll has exposed the huge influence that Reform UK is set to have on the election result. The Right-wing party would not win any seats, but support for it would be the decisive factor in 96 Tory losses – the difference between a Labour majority and a hung Parliament.

The polling also found that 42 per cent of people back small boat migrants being “removed from the country immediatel­y”, with 15 per cent believing they should be removed with right of appeal.

The row over the Rwanda Bill isn’t just legislativ­e – it is also political, with Right-wingers arguing that it must be strengthen­ed to stave off the threat from Reform, whose leader, Richard Tice, is calling for the election to be a “referendum on immigratio­n”.

As one Tory MP pointed out: “If the Government doesn’t toughen up the Bill, and it doesn’t end up stopping the boats, then Rishi is effectivel­y handing the election on a plate to Keir Starmer via Reform.

“Colleagues are worried the Prime Minister can’t seem to see this as clearly as the rest of us. The public backs tougher measures. If Rwanda fails, then we all fail. If we unite behind a bad strategy then we die anyway. Better to go down fighting.”

‘Some of those who are opposing him on Rwanda are rising up the ranks as potential successors’

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