The Scotsman

Tory MPS face moment of truth

Vote will put on record the names of politician­s who place party loyalty above honesty and the law

-

Boris Johnson’s strategy to handle the Partygate affair was to play a long game, with the Prime Minister repeatedly urging people to wait for civil servant Sue Gray’s report and then outcome of the police’s investigat­ions.

Despite the ridicule this attracted – why did Johnson need an inquiry to tell him whether or not he had been at a party? – it allowed anger to fade and events to intervene, softening attitudes to a scandal in plain sight.

However, there are now signs that Labour too is playing a long game, and one that should worry Conservati­ve MPS.

Labour know the Commons vote tomorrow on whether to refer Johnson to the cross-party Privileges Committee for an investigat­ion into whether he knowingly misled Parliament is unlikely to pass.

However, on the off-chance it did, the affair would remain in the public eye.

And a cross-party report which would struggle to avoid what is already a fairly obvious conclusion – that Johnson broke lockdown laws, then lied about it – might make his resignatio­n inevitable.

But, if the vote fails, it will still have forced MPS in the so-called ‘party of law and order’, who may have hoped to avoid giving their seal of approval to a law-breaking Prime Minister, to make a public judgement that Johnson’s actions were acceptable and there was ‘nothing to see here’.

In the deeply partisan atmosphere of Westminste­r, tomorrow’s vote may seem like a fairly straightfo­rward one in which ‘a good Conservati­ve’ has little option but to back their leader to the hilt. That would be a grave error.

It is, instead, a moment of truth and a test of character that will put on record the names of politician­s who place party loyalty above honesty and respect for the law.

The Conservati­ve Party dates back to Robert Peel’s government of 1834 and it is its principles, not personalit­ies, that have ensured its longevity. Johnson’s charms and Brexiteer credential­s may make him popular in the minds of some for now, but they are ephemeral and his obvious flaws are pulling down others around him.

Tory MPS have a big decision to make in the Commons tomorrow and one that may well come back to haunt them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom