Boris Johnson must wait for the ultimate inquiry
into his behavior
Sue Gray report laid bare lurid details of raucous
nights of booze and boogying — but failed to land a killer blow.
BY ESTHER
WEBBER AND ANNABELLE DICKSON
May 25,
2022 8:54 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/boris-johnson-must-wait-for-the-ultimate-inquiry-into-his-behavior/
LONDON —
“Lucky f*cker” was how Boris Johnson was described by one of his opponents last
week, and it seems the stars have once more aligned in his favor.
A
long-awaited report by senior civil servant Sue Gray into a series of parties
at Downing Street and Whitehall landed Wednesday. Despite one of the most
feared names in Whitehall laying bare the lurid details of raucous nights of
booze and boogying for all to see, the report failed to land a killer blow.
Gray spoke
of “failures of judgment” which saw senior staff either allow or encourage
rule-breaking events, for which she said leaders in government and the civil
service “must bear responsibility.”
Yet the
manner and timing of the Partygate reckoning make it unlikely this will come to
pass.
Gray
managed to take the sting out of her own final verdict, since she was mainly
left to repeat criticisms of the government she had made already in an interim
report.
The
drip-drip of information about social events held in Downing Street and the
slow-burning investigations by Gray and the police over six months defused some
of the allegations’ initial impact and MPs’ willingness to defenestrate
Johnson.
At one
point in February, letters of no confidence were fluttering in to the 1922
committee — part of the process by which Conservative MPs can force a vote on
removing a party leader.
Now, as one
Tory MP put it: “The critical mass of Conservatives, whether by calculation or
because there isn’t a better idea, are sticking with him.”
They are
willing to take a bet that it will all blow over by the next general election
as constituents become impatient to move on.
Johnson
appeared to tap into that sentiment at a press conference to address Gray’s
findings, saying: “I have got to keep moving forward and the government has got
to keep moving forwards.”
His
footsoldiers — especially MPs in the so-called Red Wall of former Labour
heartlands — have been heartened by the local election results, where they see
reasons for optimism about the Conservative performance.
An
experienced Tory MP said: “There’s still a view around that suddenly he’ll
become Super Boris again,” bolstered by Red Wall MPs who feel confident Labour
is not making any headway in their backyards.
One former
aide said MPs had “calmed down” because the local election results were not as
bad as they could have been.
While there
are still going to be uncomfortable moments to come for the prime minister —
notably two by-elections in June and a probe into whether he misled parliament
— the bulk of his MPs are now waiting for him to be tested, not by any review
or inquiry, but at the ballot box.
Some are
encouraged by the new No. 10 operation, with one senior MP saying: “The
tactical stuff, whether you approve of it or not, is working … They’re doing a
better job of expectation management, and the exercise they did on Keir Starmer
and Beergate was very effective” — a reference to allegations the Labour leader
also broke lockdown rules.
This is by
no means a consensus view, with a handful of MPs going over the top to suggest
sticking with Johnson is a miscalculation.
Conservative
MP Stephen Hammond told Sky News: “A lot of colleagues today are perhaps
realizing that unless something happens, we may not be able to win the next
general election.”
Pollster
James Johnson said those Conservatives defending the PM were at risk of “misinterpreting”
the local elections, arguing that while there was no “Blair-style rout” if
those patterns were replicated at a national level it would be enough to rob
them of a majority.
He added
that although voters are “increasingly sick of” Partygate, the “brand damage
has already been done” to the prime minister, with no clear sign of what might
help him recover.
“There’s no
question it is the end of days,” said one former Cabinet minister, predicting
if Johnson stayed he would bring the party down with him.
Johnson’s
plea to be allowed to get on with the job could also prove a hostage to fortune
if he can’t do enough to ease the cost of living crisis. Most of his MPs
believe that is a more severe threat than Partygate.
Not
everyone is convinced by the new-look No. 10 either. Critical senior Tories
argue Scott Morrison’s defeat in Australia undermines some of the playbook
being used by Johnson’s advisers.
Johnson’s
adviser David Canzini has worked closely with Lynton Crosby, the Australian
election campaign consultant who has been a go-to adviser for the Conservatives
in recent years.
Another of
his associates, Isaac Levido, who headed up Johnson’s election campaign, played
a big part in getting the now-defeated Morrison elected as Australia’s PM.
“They might
not be such genius election-winners after all,” one former Cabinet minister
said.


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