The Scotsman

His pants’ Johnson takes power

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towards conflict. Johnson also has to escape his own unfortunat­e record on Iranian relations, with the mishandlin­g of the case of jailed British-iranian mother Nazanin Zaghari-ratcliffe continuing to hang over him.

Gordon Brown’s first six weeks in office were dominated by crises – failed terror attacks in London’s West End and on Glasgow Airport, deadly floods across the UK, and an outbreak of foot and mouth disease.

His solid, reassuring response to each boosted the popularity of a weary Labour government formed midterm out of internal conflict.

Johnson has to hope the Iran crisis can deliver the same boost and not the first foreign policy error of his premiershi­p. The other major challenge is more predictabl­e: Brexit.

Forget everything that’s been said about negotiatio­ns going down to the wire.

Johnson’s big decision has to be made, perhaps not the moment the door of Number 10 closes behind him, but certainly when he first meets his Cabinet. Is he serious about rejecting the Irish border backstop and therefore going ahead with a no-deal Brexit?

If so, then the scale of opposition in the Commons means he will have to be ready to either call a general election or hold a referendum.

If Johnson believes he can finesse the backstop, probably by accepting a much longer post-brexit transition period, he still has to be ready to go to the people if he fails to win over Brexiteers in the European Research Group (ERG).

But he has to choose a path quickly.

If it’s negotiatio­n, then he will have to work as hard in Brussels as he does at Westminste­r to convince them that he can get a deal through the Commons.

Because of his reputation, Johnson starts with a deficit of credibilit­y in European capitals.

Before he can tackle anything else, Johnson has to assemble his team.

He has crucial decisions to make in all the major portfolios, notably who he installs as the Chancellor.

The appointmen­t will have to deliver at least some of Johnson’s spending promises while rescuing the UK economy from a no-deal Brexit. How Johnson assembles the Scottish arm of his administra­tion is also significan­t; a longer Brexit transition risks alienating Scottish Tories, who technicall­y hold the balance of power in the Commons.

Who will fill the vital role of special adviser for Scotland in Downing Street, effectivel­y the “quality control” officer for political decisionma­king when it comes to devolution?

How will the Scotland Office be restructur­ed?

Those decisions will have far-reaching consequenc­es for the shaky Tory revival north of the Border.

 ?? PICTURE: KIRSTY O’CONNOR/PA ?? result of his bid for the premiershi­p is revealed, with supporters cheering on the probable next prime minister
PICTURE: KIRSTY O’CONNOR/PA result of his bid for the premiershi­p is revealed, with supporters cheering on the probable next prime minister

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