Dominic Cummings says it is his ‘duty to get rid’
of Boris Johnson
Former No 10 chief adviser describes effort to remove
PM from office as ‘sort of like fixing the drains’
Jessica
Elgot Chief political correspondent
@jessicaelgot
Sun 30 Jan
2022 15.39 GMT
Dominic
Cummings has said it is his “duty to get rid” of Boris Johnson as prime
minister, describing it as “sort of like fixing the drains”.
The prime
minister’s former chief adviser called his former boss a “complete fuckwit”
whose only preoccupations were “Big Ben’s bongs” and “looking at maps” to
“order the building of things” in his honour.
Cummings,
who has sent evidence to the Cabinet Office inquiry led by Sue Gray, said it
was imperative Johnson was removed from office. Speaking to New York magazine,
he called it “an unpleasant but necessary job” and said it was legitimate to
remove a prime minister who had won a big election victory if they were not up
to the job.
Johnson is
expected to be handed a heavily redacted version of the Sue Gray report into
alleged breaches of lockdown rules in Downing Street early next week, as allies
briefed over the weekend that an operation to save him from a vote of no
confidence was winning round MPs.
The prime
minister is expected to travel to Ukraine on Tuesday and release the
long-awaited levelling up white paper on Wednesday as a show of purpose to his
restive MPs.
The foreign
secretary, Liz Truss, one of those in contention to replace Johnson should he
be forced out, said on Sunday Johnson was “absolutely” the best person to lead
the Conservative party into the next general election.
“There is
no contest. There is no discussion,” she said. “He has achieved an 80-seat
majority for the Conservative party. He has delivered on the Covid vaccine
programme, the booster programme, he’s delivered on Brexit and he will do a
fantastic job winning the next election for the Conservative party.”
Johnson’s
chief of staff, Dan Rosenfield, was in the spotlight on Sunday as the Sunday
Telegraph revealed he had been at the first day of the England v India Test at
Lord’s on 12 August, three days before Taliban forces entered the Afghan
capital.
Rosenfield,
along with the cabinet secretary, Simon Case, and Johnson’s principal private
secretary, Martin Reynolds, is among those expected to be criticised in the
redacted version of Gray’s report – which the Metropolitan police have asked to
be stripped of details of the most egregious alleged rule-breaking while a
police investigation is carried out.
Johnson has
told angry MPs he will oversee a full clearout of the No 10 operation, which
the Guardian understands could include a number of close allies of his wife,
Carrie Johnson, who have had a power base in No 10 since the departure of
Cummings and his associates.
Cummings
revealed one of the most damaging No 10 lockdown gatherings on his Substack,
where Reynolds had emailed staff inviting them to drinks in the garden and to
“bring your own booze”. Cummings has said Johnson was warned about the
gathering, which the prime minister has admitted to attending but claims to
have thought it was a work event.
The former
adviser told New York magazine Johnson was driven entirely by what would be in
the papers the next day. “In January 2020 I was sitting in No 10 with Boris and
the complete fuckwit is just babbling on about: ‘Will Big Ben bong for Brexit
on 31 January?’” he said.
Asked if it
was fair that he was mounting a campaign to remove his former boss, Cummings
said: “What’s fairness got to do with anything? It’s politics. All this is not
fair. The fact that someone wins an election doesn’t mean that they should just
stay there for years, right? If you’ve got a duffer, if you think someone can’t
do the job, or is unfit for the job.
“You know,
as he said to me: ‘I’m the fucking king around here and I’m going to do what I
want.’ That’s not OK. He’s not the king. He can’t do what he wants. Once you
realise someone is operating like that then your duty is to get rid of them,
not to just prop them up.”
Cummings
also told the magazine Johnson acted as if considering “what would a Roman
emperor do? So, the only thing he was really interested in – genuinely excited
about – was, like, looking at maps. Where could he order the building of
things?”
Cummings
said Johnson fantasised about “monuments to him in an Augustine fashion”.
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