Daily Mail

Here’s who SHOULD be leading the Tories

AND YOU’LL BE AMAZED WHO I THINK IT IS

- PETER OBORNE

WITH Brexit briefly shelved, there is one urgent question hanging over British politics this weekend. Theresa May: can she survive?

Many senior Tories and furious backbenche­rs want to oust her. That became clear on Thursday when she made her Commons statement in the wake of the emergency European Union summit in Brussels.

There she had to explain to fellow leaders why she was seeking another extension to Article 50, so delaying our departure from the EU yet again.

Back in Westminste­r, she was greeted with open contempt by many on her own side. Tory grandee, Sir Bill Cash, expressed the view of many in his party when he called on her to resign.

This weekend Tory MPs start their Easter break, which may well make matters worse rather than better for the Prime Minister.

Back in their constituen­cies, many will be confronted by the growing frustratio­n and anger of some voters at the delay to Brexit, and Mrs May’s decision to hold talks with Labour in an attempt to get her thrice-rejected withdrawal deal through Parliament.

The Tories have plummeted ten points in the polls in less than a month — the fastest slump since John Major’s government crashed out of the exchange rate mechanism on September 16, 1992.

This is ominous indeed: the Tories never recovered from that debacle and the way was open for Tony Blair and New Labour to sweep into power.

B UT for Mrs May and her allies, there is a sliver of optimism. In my view Theresa May is still more respected by voters than by many Tories, and that I believe is at the heart of her refusal to quit.

Her objective remains to hang on until Brexit has been completed. That would mean surviving in office until the Conservati­ve Party Conference at the end of September, just a month before Britain’s new departure date from the EU on October 31 ( a Halloween to remember if so).

The PM may just make it, but a nightmare obstacle course lies ahead of her if she is to do so.

First up are the local elections on May 2 — less than three weeks’ time. When this set of elections was last held four years ago, the Tories did rather well.

This time, local campaigner­s tell me they are expecting a bloodbath.

There’s widespread talk of a collapse of the party vote and a surge of support for Nigel Farage’s new Brexit Party and Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour. And let’s not forget that it was in the wake of the disastrous local election results of May 2009, that cabinet minister James Purnell launched a failed leadership plot against then prime minister Gordon Brown.

Don’t rule out the same thing happening again.

There will then be a three-week lull until the European elections begin on May 23.

Once again, these elections — which we are compelled to take part in if we haven’t departed the EU — threaten to plunge the Conservati­ves into electoral chaos. There are fears that Tory voters either won’t go to the polls or will simply defect to rival parties.

If Mrs May has survived thus far, this may be when demands for a change in the Tory leadership become overwhelmi­ng.

In any case, June and July are notoriousl­y the most perilous period in Parliament for any Conservati­ve leader. MPs have more time on their hands to plot in the Commons bars.

With Brexit in a shambles, local and European election meltdown, the potential for disaster during the summer is obvious.

While Party rules determine that there can be no vote of confidence in Mrs May’s leadership until the end of this year, it’s not hard to envisage a cabinet revolt and a delegation of the so-called men in grey suits going to Downing Street to tell Mrs May that her time is up. Supporters of Boris Johnson are already comparing the PM to José Mourinho towards the end of his lacklustre term at Manchester United.

Boris would be like Man U’s new manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, they say, and bring life and fizz to the Party and revive its electoral fortunes.

I think there could be some truth in this. Mr Johnson is a superlativ­e campaigner. He brings optimism and ebullience with him wherever he goes. Unlike Mrs May, he gives the impression of enjoying life and politics, too.

It is very hard, however, to see how Mr Johnson could solve the Brexit dilemma. He would be no more capable than Mrs May of mustering the Commons majority needed to press through with a Brexit consensus. A ND while Mrs May isn’t popular in Brussels, Mr Johnson is the archenemy. I can’t see him extracting concession­s that Mrs May was unable to secure.

Were Boris Johnson to become prime minister, there is only one way he could force Brexit through. That is by proroguing — suspending — Parliament and using the power of the executive to force through a No Deal Brexit.

My Downing Street sources tell me that Mrs May has already contemplat­ed and ruled out this course of action.

Mr Johnson might choose otherwise, even though such a move would prompt a constituti­onal crisis and drag the Queen, who would be required to assent to any prorogatio­n of Parliament, into the heart of the Brexit debate.

And it is for these reasons I believe it is more likely than not that Mrs May will get her wish and deliver her final speech to Tory conference in Manchester this autumn. She aims to have Brexit wrapped up by then so that she can go out on a high and secure her legacy.

But she needs to be careful what she wishes for. It may not go well, although all decent people will hope otherwise. Whatever one thinks of her political competence, she is a woman driven by duty and a sense of right and wrong.

This week the PM will reportedly take a holiday with husband Philip on a walking trip in Wales. She certainly deserves her break from Brexit — and so do the rest of us.

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