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Boris Johnson warned Tory MPs will back vote of no confidence to block no-deal Brexit

Jeremy Hunt tells his rival for prime minister to ‘man up’ and face him in live TV debates

Andrew Woodcock
Political Editor
Monday 24 June 2019 19:58 BST
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Jeremy Hunt on whether Boris Johnson should explain police presence at his house: 'I think someone who wants to be prime minister should answer questions on everything'

Boris Johnson has been warned that as many as a dozen Conservative MPs will back a vote of no confidence, triggering a general election, to block a no-deal Brexit.

The former foreign secretary has promised to take the UK out of the Europe Union on 31 October with or without an agreement on divorce terms. And his rival for the Tory leadership, Jeremy Hunt, the current foreign secretary, has not ruled out a potentially damaging no-deal outcome, though he says he is ready to extend Brexit negotiations in the hope of avoiding it.

With the incoming prime minister likely to have a working majority of no more than three MPs in the House of Commons when he arrives at 10 Downing Street next month, the defence minister Tobias Ellwood left no doubt that opponents of no deal believe they have the numbers to stop the UK crashing out.

“I think a dozen or so members of parliament would be on our side, would be voting against supporting a no deal, and that would include ministers as well as backbenchers,” he told BBC1’s Panorama: The Race for Number 10.

Tory grandee Kenneth Clarke, a veteran of Margaret Thatcher’s governments, said he would not rule out joining a no-confidence rebellion, and insisted: “I am not going to vote in favour of a government that says it is going to pursue policies which are totally incompatible with everything the Conservative Party has stood for under all those prime ministers for the decades that I have been in parliament.

And Mr Hunt suggested that the coalition of hard Brexiteers and moderates which carried Mr Johnson to overwhelming victory in the Westminster phase of the leadership race last week will “collapse” swiftly if the former London mayor reaches office.

“Sometimes in politics you can fudge and get away with it but in the case of Brexit you are going to have to make decisions immediately, and that very fragile coalition will collapse immediately when you have to make those decisions,” Mr Hunt told Radio 4’s Today. “If that happens we won’t have another leadership contest, we will have Jeremy Corbyn in No 10 and there won’t be any Brexit at all.”

But in his first television interview since the leadership contest began, Mr Johnson insisted he would be able to get his plan through parliament, and warned MPs that they face “mortal retribution” if they try to block Brexit.

He told the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg: “I think parliament now understands that the British people want us to come out and to honour the mandate that they gave us, and I think that MPs on both sides of the House also understand that they will face mortal retribution from the electorate unless we get on and do it.”

He added: “People want to get this thing done. They want to get it done sensibly. They want to get it done in a way that is generous to European Union citizens in our country - and I stress that is the first thing to do - and they want to get it done in a way that allows us to move on, which is why I think people are yearning for this great Incubus to be pitchforked off the back of British politics. They want us to get on with some fantastic things for this country. And that is what we want to do.”

Mr Johnson again refused to answer questions about an alleged altercation with his partner, Carrie Symonds, that led to police being called to their home in the early hours of Friday morning.

The former chancellor Kenneth Clarke is not ruling out voting against the government (Getty)

He said: “I've made it a rule over many, many years [that] I do not talk about stuff involving my family, my loved ones. And there's a very good reason for that. That is that, if you do, you drag them into things in a way that is not fair on them.”

He added: “I think what people want to know is: what is going on with this guy? Does he, when it comes to trust, when it comes to character and all those things, does he deliver what he says he's going to deliver? And that is the key thing.”

The interview took place as controversy raged over Mr Johnson “bottling” a leadership debate as the four-week campaign for the votes of 160,000 Conservative members gets under way. Mr Hunt told his rival not to be a coward and to “man up” and face him in head-to-head TV debates, as Sky News cancelled a planned showdown when Mr Johnson declined to sign up.

Boris Johnson refusing to appear on Sky News debate is 'cowardice', says Jeremy Hunt

The foreign secretary branded his opponent “very disrespectful” for refusing to take part in debates before ballot papers are sent out to Tory members on 6 July, when many are expected to immediately cast their votes. “The way to earn that trust with Conservative Party members and with the country is to subject yourself to scrutiny, to answer questions about what you actually want to do,” said Mr Hunt.

But the Johnson camp insisted their candidate was undergoing “a huge amount of scrutiny”, with 16 hustings events around the country and three televised debates – one during a series of MPs’ votes last week and two more in the final weeks before ballots close on 22 July. Insisting that Mr Johnson was “looking forward” to debating policy with Mr Hunt, a source said: “We would like to get our message out to the biggest possible audience, which is why we have chosen ITV over Sky.”

Johnson supporters came to his defence over the noisy altercation which led to police attending the London flat he shares with partner Carrie Symonds in the early hours of Friday. MP Nadine Dorries said Mr Johnson and Ms Symonds were “together, strong and united” and she was “stunned at the level of harassment they have had to endure”, while Jacob Rees-Mogg denounced the concerned neighbours who recorded the pair’s argument as “Corbynista curtain-twitchers”.

Carrie Symonds and Boris Johnson who had an altercation in the early hours of Friday morning (Getty)

But eyebrows were raised at photographs published on Sunday which supposedly showed the couple holding hands and smiling in a rural setting. Mr Johnson’s spokesperson was unable to say when the pictures were taken, and social media sceptics pointed out that his hair appeared significantly longer than when he was snapped on Saturday.

The Johnson camp said the leadership frontrunner would be stepping up media appearances as his drive for members’ support gets under way in earnest in the coming days, with five campaign events due to take place in London and Surrey on Tuesday.

Mr Johnson came under assault from Mr Clarke as “quite the most hopelessly irresponsible foreign secretary I’ve ever known from any party”. The long-serving cabinet minister told Panorama that Mr Johnson was “a disaster” at the Foreign Office, driving diplomats “up the wall” and making “appalling gaffes”.

And Theresa May’s effective deputy, David Lidington, said Mr Hunt would be “better equipped” to deal with national security emergencies.

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Speaking during a visit to Scotland, he said: “The prime minister will have to take those decisions often under severe time pressure and almost inevitably on the basis of intelligence evidence that is, by its very nature, going to be incomplete. My judgement is that Jeremy is the one who is best equipped to deal with the 3am call.”

A source in the Johnson team retorted: “Boris is the most experienced candidate in this election, with a track record of making the big calls, working with international partners, handling major events and cutting crime.”

Johnson supporter and Conservative MP Johnny Mercer acknowledged that the Brexit figurehead came with “his own risks that others will not have”.

But he added: “We have to put a premium on a) winning elections, b) delivering things for people who vote for us. And I think the best way of doing that at the moment is to try and shape a Boris Johnson premiership.”

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