The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Cleverly leadership warning
James Cleverly has warned Tory MPS considering submitting noconfidence letters in Rishi Sunak not to “jump out of an aeroplane” without a parachute, calling another leadership contest a “catastrophically bad idea”.
A disastrous set of local elections for the Conservative Party on May 2 could galvanise MPS unhappy with the prime minister into launching a challenge against his leadership.
A drubbing in the mayoral and council elections could lead some Tories to view replacing Mr Sunak as leader as the only way to avert a similar wipeout in a general election but the home secretary told them not to “feed the psychodrama”.
Mr Sunak has insisted he intends to call a general election in the second half of the year but there has been speculation he could fire the starting gun earlier to thwart a possible Tory leadership battle.
Asked for his message to wavering colleagues, Mr Cleverly told reporters at a press gallery lunch in Westminster yesterday: “If you’re going to jump out of an aeroplane, please make sure you’ve got a parachute before you leave the aeroplane. And don’t say ‘no, we’ll work that out on the way down’.
“I think those people who think another leadership campaign, as truncated as it might be between now and the election, is anything other than a catastrophically bad idea – I don’t get it.”
Mr Cleverly said Mr Sunak inherited a “really difficult situation” because of Covid, the Ukraine war and through the “disruption” at the end of 2022 – when Liz Truss was prime minister for 49 days.
Tory MPS should focus on the progress the UK Government is making on the economy, policing and crime levels, the Cabinet minister said.
“If you can tell me you’re willing to sacrifice all of that and our ability to talk about that, then you’re doing it wrong.
“And we should have the discipline to stay focused on what we have achieved in government and what we’re planning to do next, rather than feed the psychodrama.”
Mr Cleverly said he was not from Mr Sunak’s “political tribe” when he entered No 10 but that he had come to know him as “a very thoughtful, very clever, incredibly hardworking person”.