Analysis
Boris Johnson exit from Tory leadership race
avoids likely humiliation
Peter
Walker
Political
correspondent
However much the ex-PM blew his own trumpet he knew he
did not have enough MPs on side to get back to No 10
Sun 23 Oct
2022 22.52 BST
For all
Boris Johnson’s habitually coy language about his leadership ambitions, one
thing is abundantly clear: he only withdraws from a political race if he thinks
he cannot win it. And so it was on Sunday night.
The former
prime minister’s statement confirming his decision to not stand was a classic
of this Johnson genre: equal parts bullish insistence about his own ability to
triumph, and a pretend modesty that he is choosing another path for the sake of
unity.
In reality
many observers – and many Conservative MPs – remain deeply dubious about
Johnson’s claim that he had secured the support of 102 parliamentary
colleagues, given that fewer than half this number had said so publicly.
There will
be similar scepticism about Johnson’s insistence that, once on the ballot, he
would most likely triumph in a vote of party members, and then stand a good
chance of winning the next general election.
The first
of those was not impossible, especially as Rishi Sunak, by now an apparent
near-certainty to become the next prime minister, remains far from hugely
popular with Tory members, some of whom blame him for precipitating Johnson’s
downfall in July by resigning as chancellor.
But
probably the very best outcome Johnson could have hoped for would be to emerge
as the leader of a party where about two-third of its MPs think he is unfit for
office, some even threatening to defect or resign if he took over again.
Far more
humiliating would be to not make the 100-nomination threshold. Those who know
Johnson portray him as a politician who, even by the standards of the trade,
lives on adulation and approval. If he cannot feel wanted he would rather not
be involved.
So it was
in 2016, fresh from being hailed by Brexiters as the defining reason for the
Vote Leave victory, with Johnson billed as one of the frontrunners to succeed
David Cameron.
That time
events were even more dramatic, but followed a similar narrative. Just before
Johnson was due to formally declare, Michael Gove, his ally and Vote Leave
partner, announced he believed Johnson was unsuited to the job and that he
would stand instead. Johnson, his hopes badly damaged, gave up.
On Sunday,
Johnson followed his prediction that he could win the race if he chose to by
adding: “But in the course of the last days I have sadly come to the conclusion
that this would simply not be the right thing to do.”
Much like
the supposed 102 backers, many Tory MPs or others who have closely observed
Johnson will greet that sentence with something of a hollow laugh.
Johnson
would like the world to believe he is withdrawing for the sake of party unity,
or the national good. But if he genuinely cherished those things he would not
have launched a new bid to become PM little more than three months after he was
forced out by more than 50 ministerial resignations, and with the threat of an
official inquiry into whether he misled parliament hanging above his head.
Perhaps the
one part of Johnson’s statement that is sincere, if not necessarily accurate,
is when he states: “I believe I have much to offer but I am afraid that this is
simply not the right time.”
Johnson
very much does believe he was unfairly forced out and should be granted another
go. He also perhaps believes that in political times as fevered as this he
could yet make a comeback.
But while
definitive predictions are perilous, this does seem self-comforting, even
delusional. Johnson returned from yet another holiday during the parliamentary
session to be greeted by some former acolytes sycophantically greeting him on
social media as “boss”.
But there
were not many. Among Sunak’s 140-plus confirmed backers were the likes of
Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch and Steve Baker, from the previously Johnsonite
right of the party.
Even if he
does not fully realise it yet, Johnson is now the Conservative party’s
yesterday man. To borrow Cameron’s damning putdown of Tony Blair: he was the
future once.
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