The Citizen (KZN)

Boris’ ‘bunker is collapsing’

REVOLT LOOMS: FOUR STAFF DEFECTIONS FOLLOW GAFFE

- London

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had four staff defections on Thursday as pressure intensifie­d on him over lockdown parties and his looselippe­d style of politics.

One of the departures was linked to an inflammato­ry remark made by Johnson attacking opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer over a paedophile.

“Being honest, I wouldn’t have said it and I’m glad the prime minister clarified it,” finance minister Rishi Sunak said in an extraordin­ary rebuke of his boss during a news conference.

Sunak is tipped as a leading contender to replace Johnson, if a brewing Conservati­ve revolt against the prime minister develops further.

Downing Street confirmed that chief of staff Dan Rosenfield was leaving, just over a year after he took on the role.

His resignatio­n comes after a top civil servant, in a long-awaited inquiry, this week condemned “failures of leadership” in Downing Street over a series of parties held in violation of Covid restrictio­ns.

Also going is Johnson’s “principal private secretary”, Martin Reynolds, who sent a now-notorious e-mail in May 2020, urging Downing Street staff to “bring your own booze” to one lockdown gathering.

Their departures were confirmed not long after those of two other top advisors – director of communicat­ions Jack Doyle and head of policy Munira Mirza. Doyle was implicated in the “partygate” affair.

Johnson’s long-term ally Mirza quit after the prime minister tried to link Labour’s Starmer to the failure by UK authoritie­s to prosecute veteran TV host Jimmy Savile, who died in 2011 aged 84.

While alive, Savile was a widely loved presenter. But after his death accusation­s emerged that he had been a serial abuser of hundreds of children, without facing prosecutio­n.

In parliament on Monday, Johnson shocked many on his own side when he aired a conspiracy theory prevalent among far-right groups that Starmer had personally failed to prosecute Savile when he was director of state prosecutio­ns in England and Wales from 2008 to 2013.

Under Starmer’s watch, police decided not to press charges against Savile. Starmer was not personally involved in the decision, and he accused Johnson of “parroting the conspiracy theories of violent fascists to try to score cheap political points”.

Dominic Cummings, Johnson’s former chief aide turned bitter foe, said Mirza’s resignatio­n was an “unmistakab­le signal the bunker is collapsing”. –

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