Yorkshire Post

‘I want to see a rebuilding of trust and confidence from the Prime Minister’

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BEING A political rebel does not come naturally to Andrew Jones – so much so that his vote against Boris Johnson this week was the first time in a 19year career in public office he has ever gone against his own party leadership.

The Harrogate and Knaresboro­ugh MP, who served as a Conservati­ve councillor from 2003 before making it to Parliament in 2010, says his decision to go against the Prime Minister was not a move he made lightly.

Jones, who served in ministeria­l posts under David Cameron and Theresa May, says it was a “very different” feeling from the one he had when supporting the latter as she faced a bruising confidence vote of her own in 2018.

“I have campaigned for my party for decades, I spent two terms as a councillor representi­ng the centre of Harrogate and I have spent 12 years as a member of Parliament,” he reflects. “I have never voted against the administra­tion or the leader. This was the first vote in decades where I have showed any dissent to a party leader.

“Consequent­ly, it was an enormous measure and not one I took lightly. I had given it some very considerab­le thought before doing so and it was with some significan­t sadness I have to say – but I still did it.”

Despite finding it difficult, when asked if he regrets his decision Jones replies simply: “No.”

He adds: “I think I made the right decision. I think in politics you have to be true to your views otherwise you would be a thoroughly miserable and shallow person. It was with significan­t sadness but I do think I made the right call.”

Jones, who is originally from Ilkley, voted against Johnson in direct response to the PM’s involvemen­t in and handling of the Partygate saga.

In January he released an initial statement on Partygate setting out his unhappines­s at what had occurred and Jones says that in early February he had a one-to-one meeting with the Prime Minister in which he told him directly he was “angry, frustrated and disappoint­ed” with him. When asked if he was among the Tory MPs who wrote no confidence letters, Jones says that he considers his contact with the 1922 Committee to be confidenti­al but adds that he had “expressed my views” to the committee.

Shortly after it was announced on Monday that the threshold of 54 no confidence letters to the 1922 Committee had been passed and a vote would take place that night, Jones issued a lengthy statement explaining why he would not be backing the Prime Minister. He said that in addition to believing “lawmakers can’t be law breakers”, he was also unhappy about the Prime Minister’s past public explanatio­ns of the events set out in the Sue Gray report.

“In all the statements about the rules having been followed at all times the Prime Minister must have had a question mark in his mind over whether that was true because of what he had seen with his own eyes,” it said. “Most would have thought better of making such definitive statements because most people would have known in their hearts that work meetings do not consist of party games and copious bottles of wine.

“So I believe that the Prime Minister, in addition to the fixed penalty notice, has shown a lack of judgement in making the many statements about Partygate that he did. Most people, having seen what he had seen, would have judged those statements to be untrue and therefore not made them.”

With Mr Johnson winning the confidence vote by 211 votes to 148 and now safe from another such ballot for a year under Tory Party rules, some – including Yorkshire MP David Davis – have argued the rebels should have ensured the vote took place after this month’s two by-elections and the Privileges Committee investigat­ion into whether the Prime Minister misled Parliament over Partygate.

But Jones says the organic nature of the rebellion against the Prime Minister meant that was impossible.

“This has been a spontaneou­s set of letters going in from individual­s which has been diverse across the party. It hasn’t been organised so it is hard to say you can do it a different day when that is the background. Politics is full of what ifs.”

Jones says he agrees with fellow Yorkshire MP Philip Davies, who rebelled against Johnson but said the Prime Minister’s victory must be

accepted. “What I want to see now is a rebuilding of trust and confidence from the Prime Minister. That will mean the focus on the delivery of policy.”

Jones says Mr Johnson’s role in delivering the vaccine programme and spearheadi­ng much of the response to supporting Ukraine after the Russian invasion shows “he has got the capacity to get things done in a remarkable way”.

“We now need to see that happen in a consistent way across all policy

areas. The questions we have got now are huge.

“We haven’t had the problem of inflation in our economy for so long –

most people have never seen it before. We could be facing a period where we are dealing with that old 1970s word, stagflatio­n.”

Jones says despite his reservatio­ns about the Prime Minister’s character, he would be happy to stand for the Tories at the next election if Mr Johnson is still leader.

He says: “I’m still a Conservati­ve and I have absolutely no doubt that the principles that made me a become a Conservati­ve in the first place are still the right thing for the country.”

Andrew Jones was among the 148 Tory rebels who voted against Boris Johnson this week. He tells Chris Burn he has no regrets – but is giving the PM a new chance.

I think you have to be true to your views otherwise you would be a thoroughly miserable and shallow person.

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 ?? ?? ANDREW JONES:
His vote against Boris Johnson was the first time he has ever gone against his own party leadership.
ANDREW JONES: His vote against Boris Johnson was the first time he has ever gone against his own party leadership.

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