
Tory association chairmen are considering a confidence motion against the Tory leader, which could mimic the pressure placed on former prime minister Theresa May to quit in 2019.
Boris
Johnson’s former director of communications has warned, amid reports that the
Tory party is plotting to oust Kemi Badenoch as she is facing an inevitable
leadership challenge.
Guto
Harri, who worked for former prime minister Boris Johnson also warned the
Conservatives against selecting frontrunner Robert Jenrick as their next
leader, dubbing him a “pale imitation” of Reform UK.
Tory MPs
are plotting to remove Mrs Badenoch as panic grows over the future of the party
following Reform’s success in the local elections and continued disastrous
results in the polls.
Speaking
to Times Radio, Mr Harri warned: “I think we inevitably are heading for another
leadership challenge. And the danger there is that the party makes the wrong
decision again and chooses somebody like Robert Jenrick, who's a pale imitation
of what Kemi Badenoch is trying to be a pale imitation of, which is, you know,
Nigel Farage and reform.
“So if
that is the trap that the party is caught in, then it's a real disaster.”
Asked
whether Mr Johnson should come back to lead the Conservative Party he said:
“The honest answer for me is I think if we had a directly elected presidency,
and you could appeal to people over the heads of, you know, the Conservative
Party, frankly, then Boris would be plotting a return.
“But that
is not how our system works. And the relationship between him and the
Conservative Party broke down in a really nasty, severe, I think, irretrievable
way.”
It comes
after the Tories lost 15 councils and 674 seats at the local elections earlier
this month – devastating results, which put the future of the party at risk.
At the
same time, Nigel Farage declared that his party has now taken the place of the
Conservatives as the main opposition to Labour as it won 676 seats and overall
control of 10 councils.
Meanwhile,
this week’s tracker poll conducted by Techne UK for The Independent indicated a
collapse in support for the Tories following the local elections.
The
Conservative Party, which was on 23 per cent before the May elections, has seen
its support drop by six points in a month to 17 per cent, now just one point
ahead of the Lib Dems on 16 per cent.
And Nigel
Farage’s Reform UK hit 30 per cent for the first time, ahead of Labour on 22
points.
Mr
Jenrick, who came second in the summer Tory leadership race behind Mrs
Badenoch, is thought to be waiting in the wings to launch another leadership
bid should she be challenged.
However,
this became less likely in November after Conservative MPs made it harder to
get rid of the party’s leader by changing the rules for calling a vote of no
confidence.
Under
party rules, Tory MPs can call for a confidence vote in the party leader by
writing to Bob Blackman, chairman of the backbench 1922 Committee.
But after
the election of Mrs Badenoch, Mr Blackman said that his committee had earlier
in the week increased the minimum number of letters required to trigger a vote,
from 15 per cent of the parliamentary party to a third.
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