Rachel Johnson says ‘Keir Starmer is PM in-waiting’… as her brother Boris plots his ‘Churchillian’ return to No10 after resignation of Liz Truss
- Former PM Boris Johnson’s sister Rachel says Sir Keir Starmer is ‘PM in waiting’
- Avoided questions about whether Mr Johnson is going to run again for leader
- Instead she painted a picture of what Sir Keir’s first days in charge may look like
Boris Johnson’s sister last night said the man he used to mock as Captain Hindsight, Sir Keir Starmer, was a ‘Prime Minister in waiting’.
Rachel Johnson’s surprising comments were aired on Question Time as she was asked about Liz Truss’s disastrous spell as PM.
The special edition of the BBC discussion show saw Ms Johnson swerve questions about whether her brother would stand to be leader again.
And she even laid out how the Labour leader’s first days could look if he got the top political position.
She was asked her opinion on whether Sir Keir would make a credible Prime Minister.
Mrs Johnson said: ‘Of course he would. He looks like a Prime Minister, he sounds like a Prime Minister.
Liz Truss announced her resignation, outside Number 10 Downing Street at 1.30pm yesterday
Her predecessor – Boris Johnson – is said to be mulling over whether to run for leader again
‘At the moment he is Prime Minister in waiting as the polls stand isn’t he? He’s, what, 30 points ahead?
‘So all he’s got to do as far as I can see is not spook the markets anymore. When the next Prime Minister comes in, they can get rid of Jeremy Hunt if he or she so desires, but the real boss is the bond markets.
‘So that’s what Keir’s got to look at when he lays out, which he will, his economic plan and his manifesto going into the next election.’
Ms Truss became the shortest serving Prime Minister in British history yesterday as she pulled the plug on what had been a disastrous 45 days at the top.
Between her and her handpicked Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, they crashed the economy, devalued the pound and sent mortgage rates soaring.
And in the end Kwarteng’s left-field replacement Jeremy Hunt ripping up most of their minibudget policies showed her power had almost entirely evaporated.
Rachel Johnson suggested Sir Keir could be a good Prime Minister in BBC show panel chat
Kwasi Kwarteng and Liz Truss both chuckle to themselves in happier times earlier this month
Yesterday the pound rallied at the exact point Liz Truss quit the job and left the PM position
Truss is shortest serving PM ever
Liz Truss is now the shortest serving prime minister in British history.
She clocked up 44 full days in the role – a long way behind the next shortest premiership, that of Tory statesman George Canning, who spent 118 full days as PM in 1827 before dying in office from ill health.
Ms Truss was to have overtaken this number of days on January 3 2023.
But instead she will fall short by more than two months, with the next prime minister due to be elected within the next week.
Some PMs have had shorter terms, but gone on to take charge in No10 again.
Standing at the now-familiar lectern placed outside No 10 at 1.30pm yesterday she handed her notice in to much relief.
Now Boris Johnson is reportedly plotting an astonishing political comeback.
He has privately urged Conservative MPs – including his rival and odds-on favourite Rishi Sunak – to back him in the race to become prime minister.
Just weeks after himself being forced out – and telling the House of Commons: ‘Hasta la vista, baby!’ – Mr Johnson is said to be shoring up alliances by insisting he is the only candidate who can win an election against Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer.
But he will need the backing of at least 100 MPs if he wants to become only the third prime minister in history to return for a second stint after leaving office, following in the footsteps of his hero – Winston Churchill – and Labour’s Harold Wilson.
While it is believed he already has the backing of 50, compared to Mr Sunak’s 39, the prospect of a Boris comeback has forced other Tory MPs to threaten to quit and trigger by-elections, with one branding him ‘ego-on-sticks’ and another telling him to ‘go back to the beach.’ Mr Johnson is currently away on holiday, but is said to be planning a swift return amid the Tory’s latest leadership crisis.
In a bid to heal divisions in the party, he is reportedly pressing Mr Sunak, his former Chancellor, to reach out and ‘get back together’. The remarkable olive branch follows months of feuding after the former chancellor was accused of ‘knifing Boris in the back’ when he dramatically left his cabinet position, sparking a wave of resignations that ultimately toppled Mr Johnson’s premiership.
It comes after a source last night said Mr Johnson acknowledged he had made ‘mistakes’ and he would now be keen to ‘reach out to talents across the party’, and be a ‘healing, unifying’ leader.
However friends of Mr Sunak dampened hopes of a happy reunion, telling the Sun that while he wants to bury the hatchet, his goal is to become PM so he can ‘get on with the task of rebuilding the battered economy.’
Mr Sunak also had his eyes on another potential teammate; Penny Mordaunt, however she was said to be rejecting his attempts to form a joint ticket, as the current Leader of the Commons ‘does not want to play second fiddle’, a source told the Telegraph.
Who takes over now? Tory leadership election will last just a WEEK and new leader will be installed by Friday 28 October as party squabbles over who can be the ‘unity candidate’
Liz Truss’s bombshell resignation today sets up a lighting fast election for a new Tory leader with no obvious unity candidate to take over.
Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak are both considering a new run at power in the contest that Tories hope will select a new leader by Friday October 28.
This would put the new leader in place in time for a crucial financial statement on October 31 which is intended to reassure the City of London that the Government has a plan to repair the nation’s finances.
Sir Graham said there was an expectation that Tory members would be involved in the process but ‘I think we’re deeply conscious of the imperative in the national interest of resolving this clearly and quickly’.
The party is keen to avoid a re-run of the summer’s bitter and protracted 55-day race in which Ms Truss beat Mr Sunak.
That race saw both sides engage in bitter blue-on-blue infighting, mainly over the economy, that did not help the party in the polls.
Ms Truss spent more than an hour in talks with 1922 Committee chairman Sir Graham Brady, Tory chairman Jake Berry and deputy PM Therese Coffey this morning.
Afterwards, announcing her resignation after just 44 days she revealed they had agreed a truncated election campaign lasting a week.
Sir Graham told reporters that he wants to run it, including possibly a vote of 160,000 party members, before the Chancellor Jeremy Hunt makes the fiscal statement on spending on October 31.
Asked if the party faithful will be included in the process, he told reporters: ‘Well, that is the expectation.
‘So the reason I’ve spoken to the party chairman and I discussed the parameters of a process is to look at how we can make the whole thing happen, including the party being consulted, by Friday next week.’
Sir Graham added: ‘I think we’re deeply conscious of the imperative in the national interest of resolving this clearly and quickly.’
They appear to be pinning their hopes on a single unity candidate can be identified who can effectively step in and avoid any further unpleasantness, with the party hemorrhaging support in the polls.
However, that unity candidate has yet to emerge, with several big names suggesting it should be them.
Those in the frame include Mr Sunak, the former chancellor, Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and Defence Secretary Ben Wallace.
Liz Truss’s bombshell resignation today sets up a lighting fast election for a new Tory leader with no obvious unity candidate to take over.
The former prime minister, who was forced out of Downing Street in the summer after a scandal-plagued three years in charge, is believed to be sounding out advice on mounting a comeback.
The party is keen to avoid a re-run of the summer’s bitter and protracted 55-day race in which Ms Truss beat Mr Sunak.
Those in the frame include Mr Sunak and (top to bottom) Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and Defence Secretary Ben Wallace.
The the main obstacle remains the lack of consensus on who should take over and what the process should be, with little appetite for a drawn-out contest. There are signs leadership battle lines are already being drawn, with former minister Crispin Blunt openly calling for Jeremy Hunt to get the keys to No10.
Nadine Dorries warned the only person who could return in a ‘coronation’ is Boris Johnson. Other MPs want Rishi Sunak or Penny Mordaunt to take over.
One senior MP, not previously a fan of the ex-PM, told MailOnline Sir Graham has to come up with a ‘plan’. ‘Bring back Boris or get Jeremy Hunt in. If you get Boris back in you just hit the reset button,’ they said.
One idea being pushed by influential Tories is that MPs vote on a successor, but there is a very high threshold of nominations to get on the ballot.
The 1922 committee could ask candidates to agree that they will step aside if they are not in pole position when the field is whittled down to a final two. That would avoid the need for a run-off vote of the entire party membership.
A source said of the blueprint: ‘That has been put to someone very senior in the party, very, very senior.’
Ms Truss has said she will stay on as Prime Minister until a successor is chosen via a leadership election to be held within the next week.
Speaking in Downing Street, she said: ‘This morning I met the chairman of the 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady.
‘We’ve agreed that there will be a leadership election to be completed within the next week.
‘This will ensure that we remain on a path to deliver our fiscal plan and maintain our country’s economic stability and national security.
‘I will remain as Prime Minister until a successor has been chosen.
‘Thank you.’
Here we look at who could take over power:
BORIS JOHNSON
Could Boris Johnson make an unlikely come-back just three months after resigning in disgrace?
He was eventually pulled from office after a massive ministerial rebellion in July, after Partygate, Wallpapergate and a myriad of other scandals including the removal of whip Chris Pincher pulled down his premiership.
But he still has his supporters in the parliamentary party and wider conservative ranks – though polls show a majority of voters believe he was right to quit.
One MPO told MailOnline he could be the best solution to the problems the party faces.
‘If you can find a unity candidate you are a better man than I,’ the former minister said. ‘There isn’t one. It is a funny kind of strength.
‘The membership didn’t want to get ride of Boris… They would welcome it. He is the only one with a personality that can appeal to anybody.’
They added: ‘He is like Heineken. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility.’
Nadine Dorries, a staunch ally of the former prime minister and a backer of Liz Truss, made a fresh appeal to doubting Conservative MPs to stand behind the current leader. But the former Culture Secretary said ‘only one MP has a mandate’ from both the Tory party and the British public – Mr Johnson
However defence minister James Heappey threw shade at the ex-PM today. The Armed Forces Minister told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme there was no alternative unity candidate and defended Ms Truss, saying that at least she had apologised quicker than Boris Johnson did when he was prime minister.
Last night Tory plotters were told to reinstate Mr Johnson to No 10 or face a general election ‘within weeks’.
Nadine Dorries, a staunch ally of the former prime minister and a backer of Ms Truss, made a fresh appeal to doubting Conservative MPs to stand behind the current leader.
In recent weeks she has called for Ms Truss to hold a fresh election if she was insistent on wavering over her predecessor’s policies.
But the former Culture Secretary said ‘only one MP has a mandate’ from both the Tory party and the British public – Mr Johnson.
RISHI SUNAK
The former Chancellor, 42, was the runner-up in this summer’s Tory leadership race.
He and Ms Truss went head-to-head as the final pairing in the contest to replace Boris Johnson in No10.
They engaged in bitter exchanges over their economic agendas during a lengthy series of hustings events across the UK.
Now that Ms Truss has abandoned almost all her leadership pledges on tax cuts – and is adopting much of the approach pursued by Mr Sunak when he was Chancellor – some MPs will be wondering why they don’t just put him in charge instead.
A number of his supporters are also likely to take a ‘told you so’ attitude to the Government’s current travails – after Mr Sunak’s warned this summer of market turmoil if Ms Truss followed through with her unfunded tax cuts.
Mr Sunak won the support of 137 MPs in the initial stages of the Tory leadership contest – 24 more than Ms Truss – and retains a strong backing within the parliamentary party.
After overseeing the Government’s economic response to the Covid crisis, he also has experience of political leadership in turbulent times.
MPs might be wary of installing a leader who was rejected by the Tory membership little more than a month ago.
There is also lingering resentment at Mr Sunak for his resignation as Chancellor in July, which many of Mr Johnson’s loyalists still blame for the former PM’s ousting from No10.
But a new poll today suggests the grassroots of the party may be more accepting than previously thought.
The poll of Conservative members by JL Partners for the Daily Telegraph found that 60 per cent of them would now back Mr Sunak for party leader, once undecided and non-voting members are excluded. More than four-in-10 (43 per cent) would support him outright, to Truss’s (28 per cent)
JEREMY HUNT
The 55-year-old was a shock appointment as the new Chancellor on Friday following Ms Truss’s sacking of her ally Kwasi Kwarteng.
He is now being referred to among some Tory MPs as the ‘de facto PM’ after he tore up what remained of Ms Truss’s mini-Budget plans and outlined a completely new economic agenda.
Mr Hunt is being talked up as a potential ‘unity’ candidate behind which the competing wings of the Conservative Party could rally behind, amid the current economic crisis.
He is an experienced Cabinet minister and is the longest-serving Health Secretary in British political history following his spell in charge of the NHS between 2012 and 2018.
Mr Hunt has also previously served as Foreign Secretary and Culture Secretary and would be seen as a safe pair of hands.
Jeremy Hunt has replaced Kwasi Kwarteng as Chancellor – but he has ruled out a tilt at the top job and urged MPs to give Ms Truss ‘a chance’
There have been suggestions he could enter No10 as a ‘caretaker’ PM to steady the ship before another leader is elected.
But Mr Hunt himself is distancing himself from talk about his leadership chances and has ruled out a tilt at the top job as he called on MPs to give Ms Truss ‘a chance’.
‘I rule it out, Mrs Hunt rules it out, three Hunt children rule it out,’ he told Sky News.
During this summer’s Tory leadership contest, Mr Hunt was knocked out in the first round of voting by MPs when he attracted the support of just 18 colleagues.
It is this recent demonstration of a paucity of support for Mr Hunt – who went on to support Mr Sunak against Ms Truss – among Conservative MPs that would count against him if he changed his mind.
He was previously the runner-up to Mr Johnson in the 2019 Tory leadership election, in which he was roundly rejected by Tory members.
Following his elimination from this summer’s contest, Mr Hunt had appeared to admit his hopes of ever seizing the Tory crown were over.
‘It’s become obvious to me you only get one big shot at this, and I had mine in 2019.’ he said at the time.
PENNY MORDAUNT
The Leader of the House of Commons, 49, came close to reaching the final round of this summer’s Tory leadership contest.
She finished third behind Ms Truss and Mr Sunak when she secured the support of 105 MPs.
The Royal Navy reservist has since been drafted back into the Cabinet, where she previously served as Defence Secretary under Theresa May’s premiership.
But, this summer’s leadership contest saw questions raised about Ms Mordaunt’s ministerial record.
There was stinging criticism of Ms Mordaunt’s work ethic as she was accused of going missing from her ministerial duties by rival camps.
Anne-Marie Trevelyan, who was Ms Mordaunt’s former boss, moaned about she had ‘not been available’ at various times as a trade minister and left others to ‘pick up the pieces’.
Penny Mordaunt finished third behind Ms Truss and Mr Sunak in this summer’s Tory leadership contest when she secured the support of 105 MPs
It was claimed Ms Mordaunt had instead spent her time focusing on preparations for her leadership campaign.
She also had to fight hard during the Tory leadership contest against criticism of her stance on trans issues, including her past claim that ‘trans women are women’.
Ms Mordaunt blasted critics trying to depict her as ‘woke’.
One suggestion at Westminster is the possibility of Ms Mordaunt teaming up with Mr Sunak as part of a joint ticket to replace Ms Truss.
But plotters are said to be undecided on who would be PM out of the pair, if they were to front a ‘government of all the talents’ between them.
Last night it was reported that Ms Mordaunt’s allies reached out to Mr Sunak to be her chancellor, but were rebuffed.
BEN WALLACE
The 52-year-old is popular with Tory members following the Defence Secretary’s efforts in leading Britain’s military response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
He is also being spoken of as a ‘unity’ candidate to bring the party back together, should Ms Truss depart.
The former Army officer has routinely topped the polls among the Conservatives grassroots.
But he did not enter this summer’s leadership contest after ‘careful consideration’ and later backed Ms Truss.
At this month’s Conservative Party conference in Birmingham, Mr Wallace admitted he was ‘conflicted’ about a possible leadership bid in the future.
He told a fringe event: ‘At this time of life, the idea was no. I mean do I rule it out? No. I don’t rule it out, but will I be here in a few years’ time? I don’t know either.’
The 52-year-old is popular with Tory members following the Defence Secretary’s efforts in leading Britain’s military response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Mr Wallace might be popular with Tory members, but would be less well-known to members of the public as he has only been a Cabinet minister since 2019.
Tory MPs might also fear he is untested as he has never held one of the ‘great offices of state’ as Mrs May, Mr Johnson and Ms Truss all had before they entered No10.
Mr Wallace has also been touted as a possible successor to NATO general secretary Jens Stoltenberg.
Last night be repeated his desire to stay at defence, telling the Times: ‘I want to be the Secretary of State for Defence until I finish. I love the job I do and we have more to do. I want the Prime Minister to be the Prime Minister and I want to do this job.’
He added: ‘I say to the colleagues who think our role is to feed the instability within the party, by proposing other people as leaders no matter who they are, (you) are doing a disservice.
‘The markets are responding at the moment in the UK to unsurety about the Government. The best way to give those markets some confidence is for people to stop playing political parlour games.’
SUELLA BRAVERMAN
Suella Braverman was only in the Home Office for a matter of weeks but she spent most of it seemingly positioning herself for a tilt at another job – that of prime minister.
The hardline Brexiteer was handed the top job as an acknowledgement of her popularity with the right of the party in the summer leadership contest, and for switching to Team Truss when she was knocked out.
But during her tenure she made a series of outbursts that put her at odds with Liz Truss, raising suggestions she was positioning herself for the next leadership race.
In a letter, Ms Braverman said she was resigning for breaching processes by sending an email from her personal account about a forthcoming ministerial statement on immigration.
But in another hammer blow for the PM’s chances of clinging on, she also complained that the government was breaking promises. She swiped that when people made ‘mistakes’ – something Ms Truss has admitted – the right thing to do was quit.
They had a huge bust-up over visas policy last night. The 42-year-old mother-of two hit the headlines just yesterday with a rant against the ‘tofu-eating wokerati’ for effectively preventing police from arresting eco-zealots who have caused mayhem and misery during weeks of protest.
The hardline Brexiteer was handed the top job as an acknowledgement of her popularity with the right of the party in the summer leadership contest, and for switching to Team Truss when she was knocked out.
She hit out at MPs who voted against tough new measures to strengthen police powers to deal with activists more quickly.
Addressing the Commons as MPs debated the Public Order Bill, Mrs Braverman said: ‘I’m afraid it’s the Labour Party, it’s the Lib Dems, it’s the coalition of chaos, it’s the Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati – dare I say, the anti-growth coalition – that we have to thank for the disruption we are seeing on our roads today.’
Her comments came as police arrested two Just Stop Oil protesters who spent 36 hours suspended from the QEII bridge, closing a major transport link between Kent and Essex due to safety fears.
At the Conservative Party conference a fortnight ago she also attacked the PM for U-turning over plans to axe the 45p top rate of income tax.
She launched a swipe as the PM tried to regain her balance, branding the U-turn on axing the 45p tax rate ‘disappointing’ and accusing rebels of a ‘coup’.
She was also blamed recently for jeopardizing a free trade deal with India by accusing its people of being the worst at overstaying visas in the UK.
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