Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Archie Bland

Monday briefing: How former PM’s decision became inevitable

Boris Johnson in a photograph shared on Saturday by Lee Anderson, the MP for Ashfield, one of his supporters.
Boris Johnson in a photograph shared on Saturday by Lee Anderson, the MP for Ashfield, one of his supporters. Photograph: Lee Anderson/Facebook

Good morning. With impeccable timing for your First Edition editor, who has once again had to bin a perfectly good newsletter because of the internal ructions of the Tory party, Boris Johnson gave up on his dream shortly before 9pm last night. Barring a remarkable surge in support for Penny Mordaunt before nominations close at 2pm, Rishi Sunak will become Conservative leader and prime minister later today.

The task facing Sunak (or Mordaunt) is enormous, and we’ll return to that in the days ahead. This morning’s newsletter is about the reasons Johnson gave for his decision, and the other plausible explanations he would rather not talk about. Here are the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. China | Xi Jinping has been confirmed as leader of China for a precedent-breaking third term, after a week-long political meeting eliminated key rivals and strengthened his political power.

  2. Climate crisis | The climate crisis poses a “significant and growing threat” to health in the UK, the country’s most senior public health expert has warned. Prof Dame Jenny Harries, chief executive of the UK Health Security Agency, said a hotter climate would bring risks on food security, flooding and mosquito-borne diseases.

  3. Salman Rushdie | Salman Rushdie has lost sight in one eye and the use of one hand after the attack he suffered in New York state two months ago, his agent has confirmed. Andrew Wylie declined to say whether Rushdie was still in hospital, saying the most important thing was that he would live.

  4. Ukraine | Russia’s grip on the city of Kherson appeared increasingly fragile after a weekend in which all civilians were ordered to leave immediately in the face of advancing Ukrainian forces.

  5. Protest | Claude Monet has become the latest artist to fall victim to food-related climate protests, after members of a German environmental group threw mashed potatoes over one of his paintings in a Potsdam museum on Sunday. The painting was covered by glass and was not hit directly.

In depth: How Johnson 2.0 crashed

Boris Johnson arriving at Gatwick Airport in London, after travelling on a flight from the Caribbean following the resignation of Liz Truss as prime minister.
Boris Johnson arriving at Gatwick Airport in London, after travelling on a flight from the Caribbean following the resignation of Liz Truss as prime minister. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Anyone who’s been asking whether Boris Johnson is really now “version 2.0”, as his supporter Nadhim Zahawi claimed in a magnificently timed Daily Telegraph endorsement published precisely two minutes after he pulled out of the race, only had to look at his statement for an answer.

Johnson explained how popular he was with the public, said he would probably have won if he had stayed in, and appeared to blame Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt’s refusal to cooperate for the nation’s loss. And he made a claim about how many people he had supporting him which many thought sounded like a stretch. If Johnson 2.0 is a narcissist with an appetite for a betrayal narrative and a questionable relationship with the truth, you might think he needed more than 47 days to work on the upgrade.

Johnson said that if he had stayed in, he “could indeed be back in Downing Street on Friday”. Here’s why he pulled out instead.

***

Not enough support from MPs

Right up until he bowed to the inevitable, Johnson’s allies were not just claiming that he could reach the 100 nomination threshold among MPs required – but that he had already crossed it. On Saturday, the BBC’s Chris Mason reported a campaign source saying that 100 supporters had been found. On Sunday, Johnson’s former chief whip Chris Heaton-Harris told a campaign WhatsApp group that they had the necessary nominations “to be on the ballot tomorrow”. Even in his exit statement, Johnson said 102 MPs were backing him.

Strange, then, that Johnson felt the need to hold “unity talks” with both of his rivals over the weekend. The briefing after the Sunak meeting suggested it did not go well: whereas a Sunak ally told the Sun that he was “keen to engage with any and all Tory MPs”, a Johnson source quoted in the FT said the former Chancellor needed to “put on his ‘big boy trousers’”. (This after beaming Johnson supporters praised him for tucking his shirt in at a meeting, which is very grown up of their little soldier.)

Strange, too, that only about 60 of those 102 MPs have backed Johnson publicly. His allies claimed that this was because many held party positions that meant they couldn’t go public; his rivals were deeply sceptical about this claim, suspecting instead that it was designed to foster the sense that his campaign was alive and kicking even as the votes piled up for Sunak. Even if the missing 42 supporters did exist, it’s not a great sign if the supposed Shy Tories phenomenon now extends to Tory MPs as well.

In the breathless early stages of the campaign (which is to say, Friday: here’s a useful timeline), it was reported that the 60 members of the hardline European Research Group would meet today at 10.30am to discuss who to back – and they might have been expected to break disproportionately towards Johnson. But the sense that this race was Sunak’s to lose was as much about the identity of his backers as the numbers he commands.

With right-wing Brexit supporters like Suella Braverman, Kemi Badenoch and Steve Baker all coming out for Johnson’s chief rival over the weekend, a powerful narrative was emerging that only a very narrow slice of the parliamentary party was behind the former prime minister. And when Suella Braverman is ditching you with a warning about “parochial and nativist fantasies”, the path to victory looks slim indeed.

The news last night that Jeremy Hunt was also about to come out with an endorsement of Sunak – rather hurtfully comparing him, rather than Johnson, to Winston Churchill – was another bit of writing on the wall. One sentence in Johnson’s statement had the unimpeachable ring of truth: “You can’t govern effectively unless you have a united party in parliament.” He didn’t.

***

Too much risk of humiliation

This part of the equation was left out of Johnson’s explanation – but it’s hard to discount. If Johnson had stayed in, there appears every chance he would have fallen short of the magic 100 number, an excruciating failure to meet even the minimum standard. If he had crossed that threshold, he would then have had to endure an indicative vote among MPs which might have seen him with more than two-thirds of the parliamentary party against him.

If he had decided to persevere despite being firmly told by the Westminster party that he wasn’t wanted, the next step would have been to test the reality of his purported popularity among party members – and yet 43% of them went for Sunak against Truss, and as Fraser Nelson suggests in this piece, at least some of the rest “want a semi-functional government and will have noticed that Johnson was ultimately unable to achieve this”.

Assume he had won: Johnson would then have had to govern in the post-Truss world of brutal economic choices, as this piece by Rowena Mason about the next prime minister’s in-tray makes clear. He would have faced the threat of defections within his own party and even the possibility of a byelection if the House of Commons privileges committee found that he misled MPs over Partygate. Johnson’s defining virtue as the presiding spirit of the Brexit campaign was arriving at the right place, at the right time. With the litany of problems that would have faced him on day one, the steps of Downing Street next Friday appear to be neither.

***

Hopes of another shot

Johnson’s resignation statement in July was laced with hints about his dissatisfaction at the manner of his exit, and his possible future return: you will remember the reference to Cincinattus, the Roman emperor who stood down but later came back again. He hit a similar note last night, plainly implying that he believes himself to be the best man for the job and reaching a conclusion that maintains his carefully burnished mythology as prince across the water: “I believe I have much to offer but I am afraid that this is simply not the right time.”

The message senior Tories have been trying to send Johnson, Katy Balls reported in the Spectator (£) last night, is “that by bowing out now, he could make a comeback in the future”. And in the Daily Telegraph (£) on Saturday, Charles Moore wrote: “I can see Boris storming back in different circumstances, with a Labour government in disarray and a lacklustre Tory opposition seeking renewal. I don’t see it working right now. True Boris fans will have the courage to tell him to sit this one out.”

In truth, leader of the opposition doesn’t sound like a very Johnsonian gig – and it is perhaps more likely that this really is the end of his status as a serious political contender. There was another sharp little line in the response put out by the Sunak camp last night: “I truly hope he continues to contribute to public life at home and abroad.” In the end, “true Boris fans” may not mind that very much – and he may not either. The great thing about being the prince across the water is, you can go on holiday to the Dominican Republic as much as you like.

What else we’ve been reading

  • Helen Davidson and Verna Yu’s analysis is a very useful guide to a crucial dynamic of the Chinese Communist party’s congress: how president Xi Jinping has purged the upper ranks of any plausible source of dissent. “His priority is projecting dominance over magnanimity,” one expert tells them. Archie

  • Please enjoy this Saturday magazine feature about talented pets. The undoubted star is Dexter, the dog that walks on two legs. My imbecilic Yorkiepoo might learn a thing or two if he read it, but he can’t even do that. Archie

  • As with all Nigel Slater recipes, his chorizo, prunes and almonds stew appears to be not so much a dinner suggestion, as instructions for nourishing your soul.
    Hannah J Davies, deputy editor, newsletters

  • Jonathan Liew’s interview with Jonathan Agnew, the cricket commentator he called out in a piece about the unjust treatment meted out to England fast bowler Jofra Archer, is a remarkably successful example of conflict resolution without the abandonment of moral principle – and totally riveting. Archie

  • Via The Atlantic (£): how the shocking murder of a 12-year-old girl in France has stoked far-right sentiment in an already divided nation. Hannah

Sport

Football | On a busy Premier League Sunday, Newcastle beat Tottenham 2-1, Fulham beat Leeds 3-2, and Aston Villa beat Brentford 4-0 in their first match since Steven Gerrard’s firing. Leicester also won 4-0 against Wolves, while Southampton held league leaders Arsenal to a 1-1 draw.

Rugby | England’s Red Roses steamrolled into the World Cup quarter-finals with a 13-try demolition of South Africa, claiming a 75-0 win that extends their unbeaten run to 28 games. There were hat-tricks from Rosie Galligan in the second row and from hooker Connie Powell.

Cricket | India (160-6) beat their great rivals Pakistan (159-8) by 4 wickets in a thrilling Twenty20 World Cup match in Melbourne. Virat Kohli led India to victory with 82 not out in a rollercoaster game that went down to the final ball.

The front pages

Guardian front page, 24 October 2022
Guardian front page, 24 October 2022 Photograph: Guardian

There’s a full rundown of Monday’s front pages here: the usual quick summary follows. The Guardian leads with “‘Not the right time’: Johnson out of race to lead the Tories”. The paper reports that the “Former PM struggled for backing” and that his “withdrawal leaves Sunak as frontrunner in battle for No 10”.

The Sun has “Bojo: It’s a no” while the Mail goes with “Rishi set for No 10 as Boris bows out”. The paper headlines a comment piece that says, “For the good of the party and the country, Mr Johnson set his dream aside.”

The Mirror leads with “Sunak set for power” and the Telegraph says “Sunak set to become PM as Johnson pulls out”. The Times carries a similar headline: “Sunak set for No 10 as Johnson quits race”. The paper writes that Johnson “blames lack of unity among candidates” for his exit from the race.

Today in Focus

A police officer from Avon and Somerset Police at Bridgwater Police Station, part of Operation Soteria, a new approach to investigating rape and serious sexual offences.
A police officer from Avon and Somerset Police at Bridgwater Police Station, part of Operation Soteria, a new approach to investigating rape and serious sexual offences. Photograph: Sam Frost/The Guardian

Operation Soteria: a new approach to investigating rape

Operation Soteria is a pilot program that aims to address the catastrophic fall in rape convictions in recent years and improve the experience of victims who report to the police. The idea is that officers focus their investigation on the suspect, rather than the credibility of the victim. Senior news reporter Alexandra Topping speaks to Hannah Moore about how effective the trial has been so far and how it changes the experience for victims.

Cartoon of the day | Edith Pritchett

Edith Pritchett / The Guardian
Edith Pritchett / The Guardian Illustration: Edith Pritchett/The Guardian

Sign up for Inside Saturday to see more of Edith Pritchett’s cartoons, the best Saturday magazine content and an exclusive look behind the scenes

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

Francis Bourgeois.
Francis Bourgeois. Photograph: Alex Lake/The Observer

In April, Francis Bourgeois (real name Luke Nicolson) uploaded a video of himself trainspotting to TikTok – and was astonished to garner an audience of millions and crowds chanting his name in the pub. Now he is a cult hero, bringing his beloved hobby to a wider world delighted by his sheer enthusiasm, with a book on the way and his own Channel 4 webseries.

“His delight is infectious,” Michael Segalov writes in this interview. “An antidote to the misery, bad news and superficial #sponcon endless scrolling otherwise offers up.” Bourgeois takes him to Willesden Junction station and happens on rare riches: “Usually there are only two locomotives on that service. This time there are four. All in the same livery. It’s verging on impossible. Fuck!” Expanding on his obsession, he explains: “Trains are my football; my gig; my hit. They stimulate me in this inexplicable way.”

Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.