The Scottish Mail on Sunday

SNOBBERY. SEXISM. SMEARS.

No10 WAR GETS EVEN NASTIER

- By GLEN OWEN POLITICAL EDITOR

BORIS JOHNSON’S ousted aides have privately predicted the ‘beginning of the end’ for the Prime Minister following the extraordin­ary row which broke out over the influence of Carrie Symonds.

Friends of Dominic Cummings and Lee Cain, the Vote Leave duo who were forced to resign last week after losing a power struggle with the Prime Minister’s fiancee, say that they have questioned Mr Johnson’s ability – and desire – to stay in No10.

One said: ‘You can smell it. It’s the end of days. It’s a story as old as time. The Mad Queen destroys the court.’

Another senior figure in the Vote Leave camp added: ‘The feeling is that Rishi’s time is drawing close’ – a reference to Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s thinly veiled leadership ambitions.

But a friend of Ms Symonds hit back, describing the criticism of her influence over Mr Johnson as ‘rank misogyny’, and decrying the ‘vitriol and bitterness’ directed at her.

Boris loyalists plan to use the departure of the two aides as a chance to rebuild both the No 10 operation, under a new chief of staff, and Mr Johnson’s relations with his fractious parliament­ary party.

Last week’s war of words broke out after Mr Johnson attempted a reshuffle to stop Mr Cain from feuding with Allegra Stratton, the public face of Downing Street’s new daily televised press briefings, which are due to start in the New Year.

After Mr Cain offered to resign over Ms Stratton’s demands for independen­t access to the Prime Minister, Mr Johnson discussed moving him to a new chief of staff position – only for Ms Symonds to play a pivotal role in a party uprising against the plan. Ms Symonds, a friend

‘You can smell it. It’s the end of days. It’s a story as old as time’

of Ms Stratton’s, objected to Mr Cain’s appointmen­t on a number of grounds, including an alleged ‘macho culture’ he helped to instill.

The Observer newspaper last night reported that Ms Stratton had yesterday been ‘in tears all morning’ following what she claims were critical briefings about her by Mr Cain.

Mr Cummings attempted to save Mr Cain by also threatenin­g to resign, but his actions were in vain: he left Downing Street for the last time on Friday evening carrying a cardboard box. No 10 denied reports that the pair had been ordered out for briefing against Ms Symonds – including using the insulting term ‘Princess Nut Nut’.

Mr Johnson feared the pair would ‘poison the well’ if they were allowed to remain in their jobs until the end of the year as initially planned, and they will be on gardening leave until mid-December.

Allies of the Prime Minister fear Mr Cummings will now set up a ‘guerilla operation’ with his former Vote Leave allies designed to destabilis­e his operation, and pave the way for Mr Sunak’s succession.

One member of that group said last night: ‘It’s the beginning of the end. Boris has lost the room.’

It was reported Mr Cummings had told allies that the PM was ‘indecisive’, and it was often left to senior Minister Michael Gove to fill the leadership vacuum.

Sir Edward Lister, a long-serving adviser to Mr Johnson, will become chief of staff for an interim period.

Friends of Ms Symonds say she has no regrets about opposing Mr Cain’s appointmen­t because she thinks ‘a more diverse group of voices’ should be advising the Prime Minister.

One said last night: ‘Surely it is in the Prime Minister’s interest that he hears from a range of people?

‘That’s the way to have a fairer and more successful operation. What man wouldn’t ask their informed partner for their opinion on something to do with work, particular­ly when it is a world they have known for many years.’

The friends described the attacks on Ms Symonds as ‘rank misogyny’, adding: ‘The idea that she is a woman and therefore shouldn’t have a voice is unfair.

‘The vitriol and bitterness towards her has been quite something...

No 10 has been devoid of senior women and the more rounded opinions which they offer.’

One Cabinet Minister said: ‘This lot had probably come to the end of the road quite a long time ago. I am convinced Boris in his heart of hearts realises he should have got rid of Cummings back at the Barnard Castle moment.

‘Everyone would have put up with it if Cummings could see round corners. It was his great strength, to have a forensic view of where public attitudes lay. The moment he lost that, his value sunk to nil. He failed to see what the Barnard Castle story was doing, he failed to see where the free schools meals was likely to go.

‘On the big judgment calls, he largely got it wrong.’

The Minister added: ‘The PM shouldn’t be involved in all of this. It should be going on out of his sight. And the fact he’s been dragged into this and has been involved in discussion­s with everybody including his girlfriend, is probably not the best use of his time or talents. We all know Boris hates this kind of crap.’

Former Brexit Secretary David Davis said the relationsh­ip between Mr Johnson and Mr Cummings ‘fell off a cliff’. The former Brexit Secretary, described as ‘thick as mince’ by Mr Cummings in 2017, added: ‘Once that’s gone, it’s gone.’

Mr Davis said the Prime Minister needed a chief of staff who was fiercely efficient but not fiercely political – ‘someone who doesn’t have their own agenda’.

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