The Mail on Sunday

Rise of the northern Tory women

Boris holds a secret reshuff le pow-wow at Chequers – and plans big futures for TV bridal show guest and a former soldier

- By and Glen Owen Harry Cole

BORIS JOHNSON has held a secret meeting at his country retreat to mastermind his first major Cabinet reshuffle since the Election – with female MPs from his party’s new Northern heartlands at the head of the queue for promotion.

On Fri day, whil e t he media was distracted by the ongoing Royal crisis, the Prime Minister slipped away to Chequers, his grace-and-favour Buckingham­shire mansion, to thrash out the new shape of his Government with some key Downing Street advisers.

The aides, who included Mr Johnson’s powerful guru Dominic Cummings and Munira Mirza, the director of the No 10 policy unit, discussed the likely winners and losers from the reshuffle and mapped out the main policy priorities of the PM’s new majority government.

Treasury Chief Secretary Rishi Sunak is among those tipped for advancemen­t in the reshuffle – expected to be announced after Brexit Day at the end of this month – but question marks hang over the future of Trade Secretary Liz Truss and Attorney General Geoffrey Cox. Meanwhile,

No 10 aides have begun to look beyond January’s reshuffle to the next generation of Conservati­ve leaders.

A special taskforce has been set up by Mr Cumming’s close aide Cleo Watson to ‘fasttrack’ new Northern female Tory MPs from the 2019 intake into key roles.

Those mentioned for special attention include Dehenna Davison, the 26-year-old MP for Bishop Auckland, who became the first Conservati­ve to represent the constituen­cy since its creation in 1885; and Sarah Atherton, who is the first Conservati­ve to represent Wrexham since its creation in 1918, the first female elected to represent the constituen­cy, and the first female Conservati­ve elected to Westminste­r representi­ng a Welsh constituen­cy.

Ms Atherton also has an impressive back story. After leaving school at 16, she served in the Intelligen­ce Corps and ran a microbrewe­ry before entering politics.

Women’s Minister Victoria Atkins, the MP for Louth and Horncastle in Lincolnshi­re, is also tipped for promotion in the imminent reshuffle.

The PM’s inner circle, including director of communicat­ions Lee Cain and lead Brexit negotiator David Frost, spent eight hours discussing what one source called ‘a mixture of big picture strategic and political thinking and the nuts and bolts of teams and personnel’.

Ms Mirza will this week send a letter to each Cabinet Minister containing instructio­ns about the policy areas they should prioritise over the coming year.

At Chequers, the group discussed the Government’s strategy for the Brexit trade talks and key domestic policies, centred on funding injections for NHS, new law-andorder reforms – including how to recruit the 20,000 extra police promised during the Election campaign – and the roll-out of a new Australian-style points-based immigratio­n system.

After a slow start to the year, with Mr Johnson accused of being a ‘submarine’ Prime Minister after refusing to break his Caribbean holiday to deal with the Iran crisis, No 10 sources say they planning to ‘crank up the pace of delivery’ on the policies set out in the party’s manifesto. But senior government sources say t hat Mr Johnson intends to be more of a ‘hands-off’ premier who will allow Ministers to lead the responses to future crises. Even after returning from his break in Mustique, Mr Johnson sent Defence Secretary Ben Wallace to the Commons to represent t he Government over Donald Trump’s decision to kill a leading Iranian general.

A source said: ‘It won’t just be the case with internatio­nal crises which coincide with his holidays – if there are floods, expect to see the Environmen­t Secretary. Boris wants department­s t o develop t heir expertise and enjoy autonomy.’

A No 10 insider added: ‘The Prime Minister will be focused on his core issues – Brexit, law and order and the NHS. Last week was deliberate and you will see him more and more as the chairman of the board.’

‘A plan to fast-track them into key government roles’

The source pointed to ‘a return to Cabinet government in the more traditiona­l sense, with Ministers more accountabl­e for the decisions they are taking. It makes for a good government.’

Despite the Iran crisis being f r o n t e d b y Mr Wal l a c e a n d Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, Mr Johnson gave ‘clear and very forthright instructio­ns about the direction of travel’, according to one Cabinet Minister.

The Mail on Sunday has learned that Mr Johnson opened a meeting of his top-secret National Security Council on Tuesday afternoon by setting out his foreign policy views on the United States.

A source said: ‘He was very clear – we want to be good allies with the US but we are not going to be dragged along by them on everything or sucked into conflicts.’

Another Cabinet source described Mr Johnson’s outlook as ‘more Wilson than Blair’ – a reference to Labour PM Harold Wilson, who kept Britain out of the war in Vietnam, rather than Tony Blair, who led us into conflict in Iraq.

Under the new female taskforce, female staff in Downing Street will meet regularly with the women

MPs to advise them on how to climb the ministeria­l ranks.

A source said: ‘Many of these brilliant MPs did not expect to win and we have a duty of care to make sure they succeed in Westminste­r. We are going to be in government for at least half of the 2020s, and have a unique opportunit­y to change the party and Britain for good.’

The poster girl for Mr Johnson’s assault on Labour’s Northern heartlands, Ms Davison told The Mail on Sunday during the Election campaign that she was just 13 when she learned her father Dominic had been killed by a single blow to the head in a pub. Ms Davison, who was on her third bid to enter the Commons, won Bishop Auckland with a majority of nearly 8,000 votes.

A former contestant on the Channel 4 show Bride And Prejudice with her fiance – 35 years her senior – she received support on the campaign trail from Mr Johnson’s girlfriend Carrie Symonds, and admitted that the ‘poster girl thing’ was probably due to her tragic family story and her ‘slightly unusual demographi­cs’. Last night a No10 source said: ‘The PM is committed to getting more women MPs in total, and promoting the Tory women who are already on the green benches.

‘His first Downing Street reception of the year was for Tory women MPs and female advisers.

‘This sits alongside his work on girls’ education, which will continue as a major personal priority.’

Mr Johnson’s No 10 team have also been canvassing opinions on how to mark Brexit, which will take place at 11pm on January 31.

One option that was considered – extending the licensing hours into February 1 – has now been ruled out. A source said: ‘We thought that it would allow Brexiteers to celebrate and Remainers to drown their sorrows, but we have now decided against it.’

‘Many of these brilliant MPs didn’t expect to win’

 ??  ?? POSTER GIRL:
Bishop Auckland MP Dehenna Davison
POSTER GIRL: Bishop Auckland MP Dehenna Davison
 ??  ?? OLD FOES: Now Michael Gove is in line to become Boris Johnson’s No 2
OLD FOES: Now Michael Gove is in line to become Boris Johnson’s No 2
 ??  ?? HIGHLY RATED:
Lincolnshi­re MP Victoria Atkins
HIGHLY RATED: Lincolnshi­re MP Victoria Atkins
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ARMY PAST: Wrexham MP Sarah Atherton
ARMY PAST: Wrexham MP Sarah Atherton

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