The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Boris ‘plots early General Election to see off his rivals’

As Partygate farce trundles on...

- By Glen Owen and Anna Mikhailova

BORIS JOHNSON could ratchet up preparatio­ns for an early General Election in an attempt to ease pressure from within his party for a leadership challenge, senior Government sources believe.

Party whips think it is now inevitable that the Prime Minister will face a vote of no confidence if the Conservati­ves lose the by-election in marginal Wakefield that is expected in June, following weeks of damaging rows over lockdown parties in Downing Street.

Sources believe a total of 46 letters calling for a vote have been sent to Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the backbench Conservati­ve 1922 Committee, just eight short of the total needed. A contest is triggered if a majority of MPs vote for it.

But the Government sources think that if Mr Johnson can hang on until the autumn, the prospect of a potential election in 2023, rather then the expected 2024, will stay the rebels’ hand as it would not leave sufficient time for a new leader to bed in before polling day.

The sources put the odds of Mr Johnson leading the party into the next election at 50-50.

Tensions over the long-running

Partygate saga came to a head again last week after MPs backed a Commons inquiry into whether Mr Johnson has misled them. That followed attempts by No10 to delay the vote being abandoned following a rebellion by Tory backbenche­rs.

It is understood that up to 40 Government Ministers, ministeria­l aides and senior Tories were prepared to defy Downing Street in a show of strength which could not be ignored.

Mr Johnson, his wife Carrie and the Chancellor Rishi Sunak were fined by police earlier this month for breaching lockdown rules by attending a gathering to celebrate his birthday in June 2020.

The Prime Minister – who returned yesterday from a twoday visit to India – is known to have attended at least two more of the 12 events being investigat­ed by the Met Police.

David Canzini, who was appointed as Mr Johnson’s deputy chief of staff two months ago, has been drumming into Government advisers the need to be prepared ‘for a General

Election at any time’. A key ally of long-term Johnson adviser Sir Lynton Crosby, Mr Canzini, has been tasked by the Prime Minister with exerting a new grip on the Government’s operations.

No10’s original plan for election timing was to ‘go long’ into 2024 to give the economy time to recover from the impact of the pandemic, and allow

Mr Sunak the time to woo voters with a tax cut.

However, these considerat­ions are being outweighed by calculatio­ns about how to keep Mr Johnson in power.

Last night it was claimed that up to seven Conservati­ves have talked to Labour about defection. Particular concern has been raised about Dehenna Davison, a Red Wall MP.

The Prime Minister’s fate now lies in the hands of the Commons Privileges Committee, which has the power to examine the estimated 300 pictures of lockdown-busting parties collected by the Met. Labour, which has the power to appoint the chairman of the seven-strong committee, is looking for a

‘big beast’ such as former Foreign Secretary Dame Margaret Beckett to head the probe.

The party’s

Chris Bryant had to recuse himself from the Committee last week after publicly accusing

Mr Johnson of being a ‘proven liar’.

A Labour source confirmed the party was looking for a ‘grandee, an elder statesman’ to take Mr Bryant’s place.

Some MPs last night called for the whole committee to be temporaril­y replaced by new candidates – as was done for the Parliament­ary inquiry into Tory former Cabinet Minister Damian Green – to ensure fair process. This follows concern that three of the four Tories on the committee – Laura Farris, Alberto Costa and Andy Carter – are on the Government payroll as ministeria­l aides.

‘Need to be prepared for a poll at any time’

 ?? ?? POLL PLANS: The PM prepares to leave Delhi
POLL PLANS: The PM prepares to leave Delhi

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