Daily Mirror

How No10 fumbled the crisis

Downplayin­g.. defending.. lying.. Johnson heaped more shame on Tories & himself

- BY BEN GLAZE Deputy Political Editor ben.glaze@mirror.co.uk @benglaze

BORIS Johnson has never enjoyed his weekly round of the Commons tea rooms to shore up support after PMQs – a world king should not have to court his subjects.

So the fact he was there yesterday shows that No10 had finally and belatedly seen the black clouds looming.

Clearly it was too late, and last night the storm broke over the Prime Minister’s head, plunging his premiershi­p into its greatest jeopardy yet.

The sky had begun darkening last week, when he flew back from an eight-day foreign jaunt on Thursday evening to be confronted with news of Chris Pincher’s shame and his resignatio­n as Deputy Chief Whip.

Last night allegation­s that Pincher had groped two men in the Carlton Club – and Downing Street’s handling of the scandal – looked set to seal the PM’s fate.

The phone call that set the whole train of events in motion arrived moments after Mr Johnson’s plane touched down at Stansted airport following his dizzying diplomatic tour taking in Rwanda, Germany and Spain.

While “A*** Pincher” voluntaril­y quit the whips office, Mr Johnson baulked at kicking him out of the party and potentiall­y triggering yet another by-election.

On Friday there unfolded a shameful session of the daily lobby questions with the PM’s spokesman – in this case, the deputy official spokesman. A hapless civil servant, either poorly briefed or directly lied to by his seniors, told journalist­s that the Prime Minister was “not aware of any specific allegation­s” against Pincher when he appointed him Deputy Chief Whip in February.

It soon became clear this simply was not true. But on Sunday, Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey was dispatched to defend the indefensib­le in a series of excruciati­ng interviews.

She repeated the line that the PM had not known about “specific claims”, adding: “I don’t believe he was aware, that’s what I’ve been told today.”

Then on Monday junior minister Will Quince was sent into broadcast studios to parrot the party line, an MP elected in 2015 who was at pains to separate what he personally felt from what he had been told.

The Downing Street position shifted when it became obvious that Mr Johnson had known full well what Pincher had been accused of and that he had decided it was not enough to stop his appointmen­t to the key role.

Pincher had previously resigned from the whips office in 2017 after a former Olympic rower and Tory activist accused him of having made an unwanted sexual pass. A Tory probe cleared him of wrongdoing.

Further allegation­s followed that year and the next, but he was re-appointed as Deputy Chief Whip by then-PM Theresa May in 2018.

Far from being unaware of any such allegation­s, it has been claimed the PM spoke of “Pincher by name, pincher by nature”.

By Monday the official line from No10 had switched to admitting the PM was aware of allegation­s that were “either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint”.

Then top Foreign Office civil servant Lord Simon McDonald spoke out, writing a letter insisting that the original No10 account was “not true” and the PM had been briefed “in

The public expect governent to be conducted properly, competentl­y and seriously

person”. Downing Street changed to insisting the PM had simply forgotten.

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Ellis told MPs: “Last week, when fresh allegation­s arose, the Prime Minister did not immediatel­y recall the conversati­on in late 2019 about this incident.

“As soon as he was reminded, the No10 press office corrected their public lines.”

Mr Johnson denied lying to his aides about the situation.

But a look at the footage from yesterday’s 9am Cabinet meeting shows Chancellor Rishi Sunak deliberate­ly and physically distancing himself from the PM.

However, no one spoke up, and they were treated to the bizarre spectacle of Mr Johnson carrying on as normal.

It was after this meeting that he made his way to the tea rooms and invited loyalists into his Commons office for drinks, desperate to guarantee their support. In truth, it was far too late. Yesterday Senior Tory Will Wragg said ministers should consider how long they were prepared to carry on supporting the PM.

He told the Commons: “I would ask them to consider... if they can any longer tolerate being part of a Government which, for better or worse, is widely regarded of having lost its sense of direction.”

For all that he had gloried in his high-profile tour on the world stage at the Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting in Rwanda, the G7 summit in Bavaria and NATO in Madrid, it was obvious to those travelling with him that things back home were not going his way.

While he was abroad, Downing Street simply shrugged off any questions about his troubled leadership as “Westminste­r bubble” queries. But

RISHI SUNAK CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER

This situation will not change under your leadership and therefore you have lost my confidence

last night, seconds after the PM was seen on TV trying to justify his response to the latest scandal, Health Secretary Sajid Javid and the Chancellor Mr Sunak dramatical­ly fell on their swords.

Today Mr Johnson’s political life hangs in the balance. And he has no one to blame but himself.

SAJID SAVID HEALTH SECRETARY

 ?? ?? I’M OUTTA HERE Javid after tense Cabinet meeting at No10 yesterday
I’M OUTTA HERE Javid after tense Cabinet meeting at No10 yesterday
 ?? ?? DISTANCE Johnson & Sunak at yesterday’s meeting
DISTANCE Johnson & Sunak at yesterday’s meeting
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? SEE THE BACK OF HIM
PM at No10
SEE THE BACK OF HIM PM at No10

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