Boris Johnson accused of ‘contempt’ for north by
snubbing Doncaster for Kyiv
Tory MPs in north of England warn PM he cannot take
seats won from Labour’s ‘red wall’ for granted
Aubrey
Allegretti Political correspondent
@breeallegretti
Fri 17 Jun
2022 18.19 BST
Boris
Johnson has been accused of showing “total contempt” for the north of England
as a senior Tory MP warned him it was an “illusion” to think the party would
comfortably hold seats that it won for the first time in 2019 at the next
general election.
Anger
erupted after the prime minister pulled out of a conference in Doncaster at the
last minute, with those in “red wall” seats turning on the prime minister.
Members of
the 50-strong Northern Research Group (NRG) of Tory MPs were promised that
Johnson would be the headline speaker at their event for hundreds of activists
– hours before he was due to speak.
It later
emerged that the prime minister was in Ukraine, meeting President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy. A source told the Guardian that a meeting between Johnson and
Zelenskiy on Friday had been scheduled in the “government grid” for at least a
week.
One Tory MP
said the visit was “not an excuse” as Johnson “could have gone there any time”,
and added: “Even his most loyal supporters here are pretty pissed off.” Another
said it was “no loss to us”, but cautioned: “The PM ought to be making every
effort to support and respect the people who hold his future in his hands.”
A senior
NRG source said that the group, which represents one of the biggest caucuses
within the Conservative party, represents constituencies that helped secure
Johnson his 80-seat majority and “came through for him” during last week’s
confidence vote.
“That
goodwill is gone,” they said, adding that Johnson’s actions had “shown a total
contempt for colleagues, contempt for members and contempt for the north”.
Jake Berry,
chair of the NRG, earlier delivered a warning to Johnson to deliver on promised
tax cuts and said the government should not take the dozens of seats it won in
Labour’s former heartlands for granted. He was not confident, he said, that the
Tories would hold on to Wakefield in next week’s byelection.
After the
chancellor, Rishi Sunak, signalled that he would wait until spiralling
inflation subsided before cutting taxes, Berry said it was “time to stop
talking about being the party of low tax and become the government of low tax”.
While the
support for households announced by Sunak was welcomed by Berry, he said he did
not believe that “prices will have come down by this time next year”, so a
“different approach” of lowering taxes was needed, “because that’s permanent”.
He said
there was a “causal link” between the UK being the only country in the G7 that
is “facing a cost of living crisis by putting taxes up” while experiencing “the
slowest-growing economy”.
Berry said
he was “really disappointed” at Johnson’s no-show, but that he understood the
prime minister “does occasionally have to do other things than come to
Doncaster – although for us, that would be our top priority”.
The prime
minister was defended in a series of tweets by Ben Wallace on Friday evening.
The defence secretary called criticism of the trip a “lot of rubbish”, adding:
“As a Northern MP myself, I am not affronted by the fact he had to cancel
speaking at the conference … Helping Ukraine win and trying to help at home are
linked.
“Part of
the inflation we see comes from gas and food prices which are partly driven
upwards because of this conflict.”
Impressing
the importance of Johnson engaging with the NRG, Berry said that “people who
think that the Conservative party now has a right to win in the north of
England are suffering from a sort of illusion … I think what was different
about 2019 was that there was an acceptance of that, there was a sort of owning
up by the Conservative party that we need to do better and we’ve got a plan to
do it.
“People understand
that Covid has intervened, but … political theory without implementation is
simply hallucination – and we’ve now got to move ruthlessly to implement real
change for people.”
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Berry also
cautioned: “Parties who fail to listen to the electorate face political
annihilation.”
Although
Johnson missed the chance to hear from his northern Tory MPs and activists,
Berry said he would “phone him tomorrow” to push for the key ideas the NRG was
promoting.
Among them
was granting local areas with metro mayors tax-setting powers, a new levelling
up formula to distribute money more equally across England, and a pledge by the
government to increase the number of young people pursuing higher-level
apprenticeships from 21% to 50% by 2030.
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