Boris Johnson swimming against the tide as voters
deliver damning verdict
Heavy by-election defeats at opposite ends of England
spell trouble for the British prime minister
BY EMILIO
CASALICCHIO AND ESTHER WEBBER
June 24,
2022 7:12 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/electoral-defeats-leave-boris-johnson-treading-water/
LONDON and
KIGALI, Rwanda — If Boris Johnson was spooked by his party’s crushing
by-election defeats Thursday night, he was doing his best not to show it.
The prime
minister, 6,000 miles from London at a summit in Rwanda, simply donned his
swimming trunks and hit the hotel pool early Friday morning, having been
briefed by senior aides on the devastating Conservative losses in Wakefield and
Tiverton — the latter the worst by-election result in the party’s long and
illustrious history.
By the time
he was out and dressed again, Johnson’s party chairman Oliver Dowden — once a
close ally — had resigned, and with a stinging rebuke to his leadership. The
prime minister and his team were blindsided.
“We cannot
carry on with business as usual,” Dowden wrote in an open letter to Johnson.
“Somebody must take responsibility.”
Johnson,
who had said earlier in the week it would be “crazy” to resign over two
by-election losses, vowed defiantly to “carry on,” but increasingly finds
himself swimming against the tide of both Tory and wider public opinion.
Earlier this month, more than 40 percent of his own MPs voted no-confidence in
his leadership.
At a press
conference in Kigali, Johnson shrugged off his domestIc woes, asking people to
remember “the context in which we’re operating in the world,” mentioning price
shocks, supply chain problems and food shortages.
“He’ll limp
on until he bleeds to death,” sighed one senior Conservative activist.
Thursday’s
twin defeats bode ill for the Conservatives’ electoral prospects, given the
contrasting nature of the seats they represent.
In the
post-industrial battleground of Wakefield, a northern city where Johnson led
the Conservatives to victory for the first time in 2019, the opposition Labour
Party won the seat back on a 13 percent swing. Labour leader Keir Starmer said
the Tories were “imploding” under Johnson’s leadership.
But it was
in the greener pastures of Tiverton and Honiton, in the rural south-west, where
the scale of Johnson’s problems were laid bare. The Tories had held different
iterations of the seat for almost 200 years, but the Liberal Democrats romped
to victory with an unprecedented 30 percent swing against the governing party —
their third big win over the Tories inside 12 months.
The loss of
both a northern working class seat and a south-west farming constituency could
spell serious trouble for Johnson, who needs to retain votes at both ends of
the country to win the next general election, expected in 2024. The Tories’
last two outright election victories, in 2015 and 2019, were down in large part
to crucial victories in the south-west and north of England respectively.
“Conservatives
should be very worried about the pincer movement which faces them,” Gavin
Barwell, a former Conservative MP and top aide to ex-Prime Minister Theresa
May, told the BBC. He warned that without change, the party was “sleepwalking
towards defeat.”
Referendum
on Johnson
There is
little sign of Johnson changing course.
The losses
are being chalked up as referendums on Johnson himself, with the prime
minister’s reputation taking a hammering over the ongoing scandal about illicit
parties held in Downing Street during the COVID lockdowns.
Those
within the Tory Party who still see Johnson as an electoral asset hope he will
put that and other ethics scandals behind him, and fight on to the next
election.
“We’re
going to be relentlessly focused on delivery and not allow the distractions of
recent times to take our eye off the ball,” Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab
told the BBC in the wake of the two defeats. “There is no doubt that we’ve
showed ill-discipline and collectively we need to reflect on that.”
But
wherever Johnson goes, scandals seem to follow. And the message behind the
scenes from senior Conservative figures appears to be to blame others, rather
than accept the prime minister might need to change.
Senior
aides noted Friday that former Conservative MPs in both seats were both forced
out in disgrace — one was convinced of sexual offenses, the other quit after
looking at porn in the House of Commons — and attacked the media for obsessing
about the lockdown parties scandal.
“I don’t
think feeding people a diet of Partygate helps people understand what this
government is doing,” said one senior official. “The endless reportage and
Kreminology is nonsense.”
Other
loyalists insisted by-election losses were normal for a serving government in
the middle of a term, and argued the voters would come back at a general
election.
“Those who,
for vested reasons, want to attack us will attack us,” one Cabinet minister said.
“Your enemies are always going to come up with negative stories.”
Challenges
ahead
But another
Cabinet minister admitted Johnson needed to take better control of the
narrative. “We need to make sure we’ve got a disciplined, focused message for
the next general election that will make people understand we’re on their
side,” the person said. “We’re not there at the moment, but I think we’ll get
there.”
The
question now is whether Johnson will make it through to the next election at
all. Some critical backbenchers who tried to oust him in the confidence vote
earlier this month will use this week’s losses to argue for a change in the
Conservative rulebook, allowing a fresh attempt in the near future.
Johnson’s
allies will fight such a move, insisting it could put the Conservatives at
greater electoral threat. “We need to calm down,” the second Cabinet minister
quoted above said. “If we lose our heads we’ll do the country no favors.”
At the very
least, Johnson will face pressure from warring factions of the Conservative
movement to lean towards their respective political ideologies.
“It’s
absolutely crucial that he brings people into the Cabinet who are committed to
open principles of lower taxes and trusting people to live their own lives,”
said one minister. “It’s for the PM to decide whether this last couple of
months are the end of the beginning, or the beginning of the end.”


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