Pack cabinet with Johnson loyalists at your
peril, Liz Truss is warned
Senior Tories tell likely leadership winner that she
needs to appoint an inclusive team as row looms over Partygate report
Toby Helm
and Michael Savage
Sat 3 Sep
2022 20.00 BST
Senior
Tories are warning Liz Truss that she will lead a deeply divided Tory party to
inevitable defeat at the next election unless she makes a concerted effort to
include senior figures from across the party – including critics of Boris
Johnson - in her cabinet.
The foreign
secretary is expected to be named on Monday as the new Tory leader and then
enter Downing Street as prime minister on Tuesday after visiting the Queen at
Balmoral.
But after a
bruising and at times hugely divisive seven-week campaign against former
chancellor Rishi Sunak, senior figures in the party fear she may be about to
pack her administration with a mix of Johnson loyalists and rightwingers such
as John Redwood and Iain Duncan Smith, inflaming tension with moderates.
On Saturday
night a former Tory cabinet minister and critic of Johnson said there would be
huge and “explosive” consequences if Truss allies such as Duncan Smith and
Nadine Dorries were appointed to top positions and then tried to use their
influence to scrap a parliamentary inquiry into whether Johnson deliberately
misled parliament.
Duncan
Smith has put his name to a parliamentary motion calling for the investigation
by the privileges committee – which could lead to Johnson being suspended as an
MP – to be “discontinued”, while Dorries has made clear she backs such a move.
The
privileges committee has been given the task of establishing whether Johnson
deliberately misled parliament by denying knowledge of lockdown-breaking
parties in Downing Street.
The former
cabinet minister said: “If she wins, then on policy issues, including budget
issues, most colleagues will take the view that she deserves the chance to put
her plans into effect. She will get things through parliament. But if her
government tries to do things on the integrity questions, I think there could
be trouble quite early on. That would be explosive.”
The tension
of Johnson’s past behaviour is one indication of how his presence may hamper
Truss as she tries to keep his allies happy while governing the country at a
time of deepening economic crisis.
Another
former cabinet minister and Johnson critic, David Davis, said that because
Truss would have won the keys to No 10 with the support of less than a third of
Tory MPs, it was vital that she unite the parliamentary party with a “big tent”
approach to the formation of her government.
“It is
incredibly important that the incoming leader knits the party together. It was
one of Boris’s earliest failures that he did not do that. He just picked the
loyalists and as a result it made it more and more difficult to manage the
party.
“It is not
just in the party’s interests but in the interests of delivering serious policy
and winning the next election. None of those are possible with a divided
party.”
Amanda
Milling, a Foreign Office minister and former party chair, said: “This
leadership contest has been toxic and bruising for the Conservative party
brand. As it concludes, the whole party, from the frontbench to the backbench,
has to come together as one united team in order to deliver for the British
people and defeat Labour. If we don’t, we risk being out of power for a
decade.”
Tory MP
Kevin Hollinrake, a member of the Treasury select committee, who still believes
Sunak may triumph and has put bets on him to do so, said the party had to win
back a reputation for competence and unity over the next 18 months or face defeat
and not dwell on past divisions.
He said:
“We are not going to win the next election with a divided party so it is
absolutely vital that whoever wins brings people in from different camps.”
As well
rewarding Johnson loyalists such as Duncan Smith, Redwood and Jacob Rees-Mogg,
Truss is expected to offer top jobs to her key backers Kwasi Kwarteng, Suella
Braverman, James Cleverly and Thérèse Coffey, while pushing out those who
failed to support her, including health secretary Steve Barclay and environment
secretary George Eustice.
A senior
minister predicted early rebellions unless Truss adopted a big tent approach.
“If she does what is rumoured and brings back Redwood and Duncan Smith,
there’ll be hell to pay. You’ll have senior people on the backbenches joining
forces, dishing out tempting amendments to the budget and all of that sort of
thing, prising the red wall MPs away from her.
“It will be
absolute mayhem, unless she makes a really concerted effort to dip into all the
different factions that make up the party. If she doesn’t do that, I think this
could be a really, really difficult time for her and therefore for us.”
Former chief
whip Mark Harper said that given divisions within the parliamentary party
“whoever wins would be well advised to appoint a broadly based cabinet and
government drawing on talent from across the parliamentary party so that we can
create a more cohesive feel and that can work together to get us through what
is going to be a very difficult autumn, winter and new year.”
MPs said
they were expecting an “absolutely massive package” of help to be announced by
Truss in the opening few weeks of her leadership, despite her claims during the
recent campaign that she opposed what she regarded as “handouts”. One MP said
there was talk of aid running to many tens of billions, paid back by the state
over a long period.
Despite the
expectation of a clear win for Truss, polling for the Observer finds that she
has actually lost ground among Conservative voters as the leadership contest
has progressed. Among those who voted Conservative in 2019, the net proportion
believing Truss “gets things done” was 26% in July. That has now fallen to 5%.
The net
proportion seeing her as a “strong leader” has fallen from 13% to -4%, while
the net proportion seeing her as a prime minister in waiting has fallen from 5%
to -11%.
It will be
seen as a sign that she has been propelled to the leadership by the early
momentum she gained in the contest, after backing tens of billions in tax cuts.
While some
of Sunak’s closest allies still believe the contest is extremely close, with
some late voters splitting in his favour, Truss is the overwhelming favourite.
Ryan Shorthouse, chief executive of the Bright Blue thinktank, said: “If she
just surrounds herself with the Boris fan club, puts in place a continuity
cabinet with the same old faces and uses the same arguments, policies and
tactics as Johnson, she will lose the confidence of the parliamentary party
rapidly. The public will feel nothing has changed.”
On Monday,
the 60-strong One Nation group of Tory MPs will meet in the House of Commons to
discuss how to react to the result of the leadership contest.
Tory
moderates fear that Truss may try to stamp her mark on the leadership with
moves to suspend the Northern Ireland protocol and perhaps even remove the UK
from the European court of human rights. “That will be a touchstone for a
number of people,” said a senior figure. “If she goes down that path there will
be trouble. All the indications are that she will not be very inclusive. I
expect that she will offer Rishi something in the hope and expectation that he
will refuse but otherwise I think it will be her people.”
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