Daily Mail

Sorry, I don’t blame Carrie for wanting a Lytle luxury

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Perhaps you may find this surprising — because I certainly do — but as we roll on through Wallpaperg­ate, it is Carrie symonds who has my sympathy.

The price of having her walls lined with gold scrolling ferns is that she has been painted as a grasping opportunis­t who would spend £1,000 on a designer tea cosy, if only she could get some mug Tory party donor to foot the bill.

a Carrie antoinette doing the cakewalk of greedy shame down corridors lined with the finest silks; a princess Nut Nut wallowing in tasteful luxury while the peasants have to make do with John Lewis posters and wipeclean sofas in practical neutrals.

Gaah! pass me that hand-stitched ivory vellum lampshade, all the better to shield my eyes from the décor horror of the high street.

But is this fair? I hold no scented candle for the prime Minister and his fiancée, who have both behaved with a remarkable lack of common sense over the refurbishm­ent of their Downing street flat. and that is putting it mildly. But is she deserving of so much of the blame?

perhaps we should remember that when Carrie moved into Downing street in July 2019 she was already (possibly) pregnant with son Wilf, who was born the following april. The impulse to nest, to put her stamp on another woman’s recently vacated domain must have been powerful.

ONE must also factor in the dreariness and claustroph­obia of living in this public building at the heart of British government. French leaders have the Élysée palace, americans have the White house, but we have a clutch of poky rooms above the shop with a vermin problem.

Yes, there is the consolatio­n of Chequers at the weekend — although not during the pandemic — but I imagine that actually living in Downing street is a kind of hell.

Those prison-like gates, the lack of sunlight and privacy, the crushing omnipresen­ce of politics and political operatives 24/7? No prime Minister has ever relished living there; his or her family even less.

Give Carrie a break. she has had to cope with pregnancy, the pandemic and her lover, Boris, becoming dangerousl­y ill. What woman would not want to take refuge in swatches, in cheering the place up, in perhaps taking tea with Lulu Lytle to discuss her range of delicious chintzes at £270 per metre and ponder over wicker or rattan for the dining room chairs?

I don’t condemn her for that, even if it seems strange that at no point did it cross her mind to ask the allimporta­nt question: ‘Boris, can we afford this?’ It appears that she pressed on without a budget, without parameters or guidance. What a mess — but surely the blame for that lies with him, not her?

Boris is a man who likes his creature comforts, but before he became prime Minister he was practicall­y living in a van. What does he care about wall sconces or sofas that he is only going to spill wine on anyway?

Look at him! here is a man who looks like he has never hung up a jacket in his life, someone who quite possibly sleeps in a skip while voles nest in his hair. Does he care about the epaulette fringing on the armchair? Or the shade of pink on the curtains?

he’d eat his dinner from a can and sit on a crate, if left to his own devices. Fighting for Brexit, fighting for his own life and fighting to get Britain through the pandemic? perhaps he simply gave the matter of refurbishm­ent very little thought — and maybe for that he even — whisper it — deserves credit? I can just imagine him saying to Carrie: ‘Yes darling, whatever you want, do it. Just don’t bother me.’ and then panicking like a coursed hare when he saw the bills.

For the problem at heart is that Boris is a man of slender means. Take him down to the studs and you will probably find that his two divorces have all but wiped him out financiall­y, while he can no longer command his usual six-figure salary for newspaper columns or top up his income by dashing off a book called pericles — The Bee’s Knees or somesuch.

his weakness for women and the chaos of his life have led him to this point of self- harm crisis, which despite all the good he has done over the past year, has left him open to ethical allegation­s. Idiot.

GIVEN all this, it seems even more ludicrous that Carrie took it upon herself to hire one of the most expensive decorators in London, to refurb what is essentiall­y a rented flat. In this initiative, she does display the regrettabl­e, casual entitlemen­t that has swirled for years around Johnson and his inner circle; people who live a five- star life they simply cannot afford, but cosy up socially and profession­ally to those who can.

In the grand scheme of things, it’s not even that much money. I’m sorry, but it’s not. an overspend of £58,000 compared with the £2.6 million spent on the Downing street press conference room, which will never be used for its original purpose? I know which I think is the bigger waste of money and the greater crime.

But that is not the point. The point is that Carrie was just carrying on, unchecked and running wild among the parrot-print fabric, thinking she was doing nothing wrong.

and Boris, who seems to spend his life in the pursuit of beautiful women, then lives in terror of them once he has captured their affections, panicked when he realised what was going on. and then obfuscated over his clumsy attempts to get others to pay the bill — his real crime.

The sin here is not in the extravagan­ce of the coverlets, but in the disgrace of the cover-up. If Boris comes to a sticky end over wallpaper, he will have no one to blame but himself. No, not even Carrie. Just no.

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 ??  ?? Nesting: Carrie Symonds
Nesting: Carrie Symonds

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