Boris Johnson wants to ‘do a Berlusconi’ back to
power, says Rory Stewart
Former Tory rival says outgoing PM aims to return to
No 10 in style of other deposed populists
‘Being an MP was bad for my brain, body and soul’ |
Rory Stewart
Aubrey
Allegretti and Sirin Kale
Mon 29 Aug
2022 06.00 BST
Boris
Johnson is “hoping to do a Berlusconi” and make a “populist return” to Downing
Street after being ousted by his own MPs, according to a former Conservative
cabinet minister.
In an
interview with the Guardian, Rory Stewart said people needed to be reminded
Johnson was forced to quit – over a slew of scandals – because some supporters
wanted Johnson to “come back”.
Several of
Johnson’s allies believe his detractors will come to rue removing him from
office upon his successor taking over, and will brush off the poor polling as
midterm blues.
But some
Conservative MPs have privately voiced concerns the party could be on course to
lose the next general election, due in part to the damage wreaked by Johnson –
evidenced by a string of byelection losses and not having held a poll lead
since December 2021.
Stewart,
who ran against Johnson in the Tory 2019 leadership election, called Johnson
“dangerous” and said “there are people who want him back”.
He added:
“I think we need to remind people why he left. He should have gone much, much
earlier. What he did was deeply, deeply shameful – and dangerous.”
Stewart
feared Johnson may attempt to return to frontbench politics and likened him to
other deposed leaders, saying: “He’s trying to do an Imran Khan or a
Berlusconi. He’s going to be hovering around, hoping for a populist return.”
The former
Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, 85, has announced his desire to
return to politics in next month’s elections after a career mired in scandal,
while the former Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan has set his sights on a
comeback after losing a no-confidence vote earlier this year.
However,
some of Johnson’s supporters are confident those who turned against him will
regret it.
A former
adviser to Johnson in No 10 said he may seek to emulate Churchill, who had two
separate spells as prime minister.
“He agrees
with most Tories that Liz is very likely to be a disaster,” the source said,
speculating Truss could face a leadership challenge herself before the next
election. “A refreshed and maybe more remorseful Boris providing optimism after
much darkness might appeal to parliamentarians and members alike.”
The
Conservative MP Michael Fabricant said: “I‘ve been talking about ‘buyers’
remorse’ – those ministers who bought into the argument that Boris must go –
for some time now. This may increase in the months to come.”
A
government source suggested Johnson would initially “focus on cultivating his
international image rather than Westminster games”, but would not disappear
from the domestic political scene completely.
.
“Even
though he’ll be happier Liz is PM than Rishi, he’ll be desperate to return as
PM and so long as that’s even the slightest possibility he’ll do whatever he
can in aid of that is my bet,” they said.
However a
despairing Johnson ally said there was “no point now having sellers’ remorse”.
“MPs who
thought that we would have a nice and friendly leadership contest were
deluded,” they said. “We could have a focused government led by Boris tackling
the cost of living and the war in Ukraine. But instead they wring their hands
when their colleagues say nasty things on Twitter.”
Johnson’s
chance of another shot at the leadership could hinge on the privileges
committee inquiry into whether he misled parliament by repeatedly denying Covid
laws were broken during parties in Downing Street.
The
seven-person committee has suffered the resignation of one Conservative MP over
the summer, Laura Farris. She has to be formally removed from the position by a
vote of the Commons when it returns.
Sources
said it would be tough to find somebody to replace her who will not attract
accusations of bias for any previous comments on Partygate. However, there are
a handful of backbench Tory MPs who keep a low profile and have little social
media presence who may be approached.
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