Boris Johnson’s resignation speech: what he said,
and what he meant
Boris
Johnson
Heather
Stewart Political editor
Thu 7 Jul
2022 15.13 BST
Boris
Johnson’s unrepentant resignation speech was delivered with trademark
bullishness, and shot through with resentment against those in his own party
who have moved against him in recent days. We look at what he said – and what
he meant.
What he
said
I’ve agreed
with Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of our backbench MPs, that the process of
choosing that new leader should begin now. The timetable will be announced next
week and I’ve today appointed a cabinet to serve, as I will, until a new leader
is in place.”
What he
meant
Johnson’s
allies were briefing on Thursday morning that he would remain in post until
October, while a successor is chosen. But he did not mention a specific date in
his speech, perhaps because there is now intense pressure on the 1922 Committee
of backbench MPs to speed up the transition.
That could
mean a faster leadership contest than envisaged in the discussions between
Johnson and Brady or even a handover to a caretaker leader, though Johnson’s
emergency mini-reshuffle to form a new cabinet in the minutes before the speech
was clearly an attempt to avoid that.
What he
said
I want to
say to the millions of people who voted for us in 2019, many of them voting
Conservative for the first time, thank you for that incredible mandate, the
biggest Conservative majority since 1987, the biggest share of the vote since
1979. And the reason I have fought so hard in the last few days to continue, to
deliver that mandate in person, was not just because I wanted to do so but
because I felt it was my job, my duty, my obligation to you, to continue to do what
we promised in 2019.
What he
meant
Johnson’s
cabinet colleagues were making clear to him that he had lost the support of his
MPs on Tuesday, but his allies were pointing to the mandate he believes he has
from the British public – 14m votes.
Of course,
given the UK has a parliamentary rather than a presidential system, that
mandate belongs to more than 350 individual Tory MPs. Johnson, however,
believes it was his own special campaigning magic that won the Conservatives
their thumping majority in 2019 and should have given him the right to carry
on.
Whether he
also felt it was his duty or obligation to continue in office is a moot point,
but a sense of duty is not a quality those who know Johnson well tend to
ascribe to him, unlike, say, Theresa May.
What he
said
I’m
immensely proud of the achievements of this government, from getting Brexit
done to settling our relations with the continent for over half a century.
Reclaiming the power for this country to make its own laws in parliament.
Getting us all through the pandemic. Delivering the fastest vaccine rollout in
Europe, the fastest exit from lockdown, and in the last few months, leading the
west in standing up to Putin’s aggression in Ukraine.
What he
meant
This was
the “greatest hits” of Johnson’s premiership. It was aimed both at reframing
the public narrative away from rule-breaking and lies and towards what he sees
as his concrete achievements, and reminding the colleagues who turfed him out
that they should be grateful.
An
alternative perspective is that he did not “get Brexit done”, as the ongoing
wrangle over the Northern Ireland protocol underlines. He botched the handling
of the Covid pandemic, and he dragged his party through a humiliating string of
self-inflicted scandals.
What he
said
Let me say
now to the people of Ukraine, I know that we in the UK will continue to back
your fight for freedom for as long as it takes.”
What he
meant
Johnson’s
ardent fealty to Ukraine’s cause has been one of the defining features of the
final months of his premiership, making him popular and well-known in the
besieged country.
Cynics have
suggested that Johnson occasionally used his close relationship with the
country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, to wriggle out of political tight
spots, including dodging a run-in with “red wall” MPs last month in favour of a
last-minute trip to Kyiv.
But as he
rightly points out here, his replacement by a new leader appears unlikely to
shift the UK’s support for Ukraine or its tough stance against Russia.
What he
said
In the last
few days I’ve tried to persuade my colleagues that it would be eccentric to
change governments when we’re delivering so much, when we have such a vast
mandate and when we’re actually only a handful of points behind in the polls …
But as we’ve seen, at Westminster the herd instinct is powerful and when the
herd moves it moves, and, my friends in politics, no one is remotely
indispensable.”
What he
meant
This was
Johnson’s most pointed dig against those who moved against him, underlining the
extraordinary fact that even in the past 24 hours, as government ministers
resigned en masse, he continued to believe he could turn things around.
Those
urging him to make a dignified exit included some of his closest erstwhile
allies, but instead of acknowledging they may have had a point, he insults them
as eccentric and acting as a herd.
This comes
despite clear evidence the Conservatives were losing their electoral allure,
having badly lost a pair of key byelections last month – one of which, Tiverton
and Honiton in Devon, they had previously held with a majority of 24,000 – and
polling showing that Johnson himself has become overwhelmingly unpopular.
A recent
word cloud prepared by the pollsters JL Partners showed by far the most common
description of the prime minister used by voters was “liar”. Whoever Johnson’s
successor turns out to be, it seems likely that until he departs to his
equivalent of David Cameron’s shepherd’s hut, he will squat on the backbenches
nursing a bitter sense of betrayal that he was not allowed to finish his
political project (whatever that was).
What he
said
To you the
British public - I know there will be many people who are relieved and perhaps
quite a few who will also be disappointed. And I want you to know how sad I am
to be giving up the best job in the world. But them’s the breaks.”
What he
meant
As his
behaviour over 72 hours amply demonstrated, Johnson fought with every fibre of
his being to cling on to power. But “them’s the breaks”- an Americanism – felt
like the closest Johnson came to an acceptance that the game is up. It also had
just a touch of the Etonian insouciance with which Cameron ended his
resignation speech, turning his back on the podium and whistling his way back
through the big black door.
What he
didn’t say
Sorry.
The prime
minister was fined for breaking lockdown rules, lost a string of crucial
byelections, appointed an alleged groper as deputy chief whip and was then
accused of lying about it, appalling his own ministers and many of the voters
who backed him in 2019. But there was not even a hint of apology in Johnson’s
speech for the chaotic melodrama he has dragged his party and the public
through.

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