Boris Johnson will quit in six months, Dominic
Cummings' father-in-law reportedly says
Claim, denied by PM and Downing Street, apparently
delivered by Humphry Wakefield to a visitor
Simon
Murphy Political correspondent
@murphy_simon
Tue 25 Aug
2020 17.34 BSTFirst published on Tue 25 Aug 2020 14.46 BST
Downing
Street probably hoped Dominic Cummings’ family would not provide any more
headaches after the furore prompted by Boris Johnson’s adviser’s lockdown dash
to his parents’ Durham farm this year.
But, in a
fresh blow to No 10, the top aide’s father-in-law has reportedly said Johnson
will stand down as prime minister in six months.
The claim –
strenuously denied by Downing Street and, later, Johnson – was apparently
delivered by Sir Humphry Wakefield to a visitor to the family’s 13th-century
Grade I-listed Chillingham Castle, in Northumberland, last week.
The
84-year-old baronet, father of Cummings’ wife, Mary, told visitor Anna
Silverman Johnson was still struggling badly after having coronavirus and would
step down in six months, according to a report in the Times.
Wakefield,
a lifelong horse rider, is said to have likened the virus to being gone in the
fetlock, a horse’s joint. “If you put a horse back to work when it’s injured it
will never recover,” he reportedly said.
Asked
during a visit to a shipyard in north Devon on Tuesday about the claim he would
be standing down as prime minister, Johnson told a Devon Live reporter: “It’s
absolute nonsense! I am feeling, if anything, far better as I’ve lost some
weight. Not enough, but I have lost at least a stone and a half.
“I feel
much much better for having lost, by my standards, quite a lot of weight.”
No 10 had
earlier also dismissed the claim as “utter nonsense”. Wakefield could not be
reached for comment.
According
to research released this month as part of the preliminary results into a study
of the long-term effects of coronavirus, nearly three-quarters of a sample
group of Covid-19 patients admitted to hospital had ongoing symptoms three
months later.
Johnson
contracted coronavirus in March. The following month, after his condition
deteriorated, he was admitted to St Thomas’ hospital in London where he spent a
week, including three nights in intensive care, before being discharged.
In a later
interview, Johnson revealed that while he was in hospital, he worried he would
not live to see his new son, Wilfred, who was born at the end of April after
the prime minister left hospital. Johnson told the Sun: “Well, yes, of course.
We’ve all got a lot to live for, a lot to do, and I won’t hide it from you, I
was thinking about that, yes.”
He added:
“I was deeply frustrated that I couldn’t see the path to … do you know what I
mean? I just couldn’t see the way out of the skip. But, yeah, I suppose there
was some terrible, as I say, some natural buoyancy or refusal to give in or
harbour negative thoughts. I never really thought that I wouldn’t come back
from it. It was more frustration.”
A joint
investigation by the Guardian and the Mirror in May revealed that Cummings
travelled 264 miles from London to Durham with his wife and child during
lockdown, leading to calls for him to be sacked.
Cummings
later said he did not regret the trip, explaining during a press conference
that he stayed in a cottage on his parents’ farm. In a now infamous excuse, he
claimed a separate 30-mile trip to Barnard Castle on Easter Sunday was to test
his eyesight to ensure he would be OK to drive back to London.
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