The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Pork Pie Plotters

- By GLEN OWEN

Referred to dismissive­ly by PM’s allies as ‘nobodies’ and ‘rookies’

As PM spends the weekend holed up at Chequers rallying MPs – is Chancellor on manoeuvres scheming to replace him?

THE attempted putsch against Boris Johnson by Tory MPs angered by the Partygate row has renewed suspicions between the Prime Minister and Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who is the favourite to succeed him.

As Mr Johnson spends the weekend trying to shore up his support by calling wavering MPs from his Chequers country retreat, Mr Sunak has been cementing his standing among the socalled Pork Pie Plotters who want to remove the Prime Minister from Downing Street.

Shortly after Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday – when Mr Johnson endured the defection to Labour of one of his MPs, Christian Wakeford, and a call for his resignatio­n from former Cabinet Minister David Davis –

Mr Sunak met rebel ringleader­s from the Red Wall constituen­cies won from Labour in the 2019 General Election.

As part of what was interprete­d as a drive to reassure the plotters that he would be as generous as Mr Johnson with regional funding, a source said they were reassured that their constituen­cies would receive ‘unlimited’ Treasury support, adding: ‘He didn’t mention the leadership, but he didn’t have to – he made clear that they would be safe in his hands.’

The source said Mr Sunak and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, his main leadership rival, had texted the rebels within hours of Mr Johnson’s hangdog interview with Sky News on Tuesday in which he sighed and mumbled about his Government’s travails.

Mr Johnson’s Cabinet allies, led by Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries, are battling to save his Premiershi­p as Downing Street braces for the publicatio­n of the official report into Partygate – and for the potential sparking of an explosive leadership contest. Ms Dorries – a die-hard Johnson loyalist – spoke to The Mail on Sunday to condemn the ‘attention-seeking behaviour’ of rebel Tory MPs who have been trying to muster the 54 letters of no-confidence needed to trigger a Commons vote on removing the Prime Minister from office.

Ms Dorries described them as a ‘small minority’ devoted to ‘chasing airtime and column inches because they are determined to remove our most successful PM since Margaret Thatcher from office’, and warned that the rebels risk jeopardisi­ng the country’s recovery from the pandemic. She said: ‘When historians look back, the UK’s vaccine rollout will be seen as one of the most successful peacetime operations in history – thanks to Boris.

‘He also took the decision to hold out against another lockdown this winter in the face of intense pressure and doom-laden prediction­s from Labour. How many businesses were saved as a consequenc­e? How many millions of people were enabled to have Christmas with their families?’

The Culture Secretary added: ‘Of course there have been mistakes. The last two years have been hell for everyone, and for those working 18 hours every single day after day for weeks on end in the Downing Street war rooms, lines clearly became blurred.’

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is also playing a key role in bolstering support, along with other members of Mr Johnson’s 2019 leadership campaign team.

No10 fears that the report into Partygate by senior civil servant Sue Gray, which is expected to land by Thursday, will prompt a further flurry of letters to Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee, and a dramatic Commons showdown. Mr Johnson’s allies say he will fight any attempt to topple him, but if a majority of his MPs vote against him the Tory party will be plunged into its second leadership contest in under three years. A number of MPs are known to have written their letters ready to send in if the report proves to be damning. Tory strategist­s worry that if Mr Johnson narrowly wins a confidence vote and stays on, the party will be trapped in a slow death cycle. Under the rules, the Prime Minister would be protected from a further challenge for a year.

The attempted putsch has unleashed infighting between rival

camps of Tory MPs, with whips also accused of heavy-handed attempts to intimidate the rebels with the threat of revealing allegation­s about their sex lives.

One MP claims it was hinted that he would be outed as homosexual, while another was reportedly warned that alleged sexual harassment would be revealed. A third was confronted with hotly denied claims of unusual sexual peccadillo­s with male prostitute­s. One has threatened to release a recording of a whip’s threats.

William Wragg, a backbenche­r who accused Downing Street of trying to blackmail rebel MPs, said yesterday he would meet police to discuss his allegation­s. Downing Street said it had not seen any proof of the behaviour he alleges.

Chris Bryant, chairman of the Commons Committee on Standards, said about a dozen Tory MPs alleged whips threatened to withdraw funding for their constituen­cies. MPs

‘I’d crawl across broken glass to put in my letter’

loyal to Mr Johnson also confronted rebel ringleader­s in the Commons tea room after PMQs. One, who was described as a ‘traitor’ for joining a meeting of 18 Red Wallers in the office of Rutland and Melton MP Alicia Kearns, bluntly told his accuser: ‘Just f*** off.’

Pro-Johnson MPs also received brutal treatment. Stoke-on-Trent North MP Jonathan Gullis, one of a few Red Wallers to back the Prime Minister on MPs’ WhatsApp groups, was ridiculed for a TV interview in which he claimed letters were being withdrawn – but admitted he didn’t know by whom or how many.

The rebels – dubbed the Pork Pie Plotters because Ms Kearns’s constituen­cy is home to Melton Mowbray pies – said dismissive references to them by Johnson allies as ‘f ****** nobodies’ and ‘ungrateful rookies’ had made them more determined. ‘After hearing that, I would crawl across broken glass to put in my letter,’ said one.

If the 54 letters are received, then Mr Sunak and Ms Truss, along with other likely contenders such as former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, are ready to run.

Early signs suggest that MPs are coalescing behind Mr Sunak, although one who has been courted said: ‘My impression is that Liz wants to go for it now, while Rishi would prefer for all this fuss to die down and run in the summer.’

 ?? ?? WAITING IN THE WINGS: Chancellor Rishi Sunak – who is the favourite to succeed Boris Johnson – is courting disaffecte­d Conservati­ve MPs
WAITING IN THE WINGS: Chancellor Rishi Sunak – who is the favourite to succeed Boris Johnson – is courting disaffecte­d Conservati­ve MPs
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