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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Entertainment
Samuel Fishwick

The Great Resignation: who’s in and who’s out of Boris Johnson’s inner circle

Such is the exodus of staff at No 10, Boris Johnson’s designer Lulu Lytle should consider installing a revolving door. Hours after the shock resignation on February 3 of Munira Mirza, the PM’s highly valued aide, Dan Rosenfield, Johnson’s chief of staff, and Martin Reynolds, his principal private secretary, also left by “mutual consent”.

Director of communications Jack Doyle also resigned, saying that “the last few weeks have taken a terrible toll on my family life”. No 10 is teetering.

There were, in effect, no senior figures remaining on Johnson’s staff by that evening. “Only three aides in No 10 are paid £140k-plus,” notes journalist Harry Lambert, and all three, Rosenfield, Doyle and Mirza, are now gone.

Johnson has wasted no time reaching for his rolodex: Mirza was promptly replaced as policy chief by Tory MP Andrew Griffith. Will more new faces follow? “The staff turnover in Downing Street has reached levels at Trump’s White House,” tweeted the FT’s former editor Lionel Barber. Who is leaving the circus, and who could throw their hat into the ring?

Munira Mirza quit her role (PA) (PA Wire)

Out

Munira Mirza

No one expected Mirza, a Johnson loyalist of 14 years and architect of his political agenda, to ditch him – least of all the PM. Johnson once told Grazia that Mirza, 44, was one of the five most influential women in his life, alongside his grandmother, Malala Yousafzai, Kate Bush and Boudicca. A Marxist-turned-libertarian, she comes from a working class Pakistani family in Oldham and holds a doctorate in sociology. In her resignation letter, leaked to The Spectator, Mirza cited Johnson’s baseless Jimmy Savile smear on Sir Keir Starmer. Mirza, who insiders say had been marginalised by Rosenfield, was dismayed that Johnson made the “scurrilous accusation” and didn’t apologise. “You are a better man than many of your detractors understand,” she told him. “It is not too late for you but, I’m sorry to say, it is too late for me.” She is said to have had a “stand-up row” with Carrie afterwards. Her friend and colleague Elena Narozanski followed her out the door the following day, taking the number of exits to five.

In

Andrew Griffith

Griffith, 50-year-old MP for Arundel and the South Downs and until recently one of Johnson’s two personal private secretaries (or PPS – a senior minister’s “eyes and ears in Parliament”), is an ex-Sky boss with hefty contacts in business and broadcasting circles. Griffith lent Mr Johnson his £9.5 million Westminster townhouse as a makeshift headquarters during the leadership race. He sits behind Johnson at every Prime Minister’s Questions and acts as a go-between for No 10 and the powerful backbench 1922 Committee (its chairman, Sir Graham Brady, is keeping tabs on the number of letters from Tory MPs needed to trigger a no confidence vote). Formerly Johnson’s chief business adviser, he won his parliamentary seat at the 2019 election. The True Blue member of Johnson’s Praetorian Guard is known to be ruthlessly ambitious and unwaveringly loyal. He has no chair in his office – preferring to stand, thereby ensuring better energy levels and shorter conversations.

Andrew Griffith (Getty Images)

Out

Dan Rosenfield

Walked before he was pushed in the “night of the cake knives”, although he says he’ll stay until a replacement is found. Rosenfield’s been blamed for presiding over the “frat boy culture” that has mired No 10 in partygate. The “unremittingly cheerful” Rosenfield, 45, replaced Dominic Cummings as chief-of-staff in December 2020; an “anti-Cummings” hire who supposedly exemplified everything the PM’s former adviser did not. An ex-Treasury official with an instinctive affinity with the “Deep Centre” of the British State, he’s a reportedly “Labour-leaning” former civil servant who spent five years at Bank of America, then joined Hakluyt, a Mayfair-based advisory firm founded by former MI6 officers, before coming to No 10. Like Mirza he’s from Manchester. He supports Manchester United and spent a gap year milking cows on a kibbutz in Israel before studying German at University College London.

In

Steve Barclay

If ever a Johnson ally has landed a tough brief, it’s Steve Barclay, 49. The MP for North East Cambridgeshire, Johnson’s new chief of staff, already has his hands full running the Cabinet Office. Critics say this new role is simply too big to juggle with his other responsibilities. But “Mr Fixer”, who will begin plotting how to create the “Office of the Prime Minister,” has defied the doomsters before. Calm and methodical, he served under Theresa May and was Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s deputy at the Treasury until last September. May gave him the poisoned chalice of Brexit secretary as she reeled from resignations over an ill-fated Brexit deal struck with Brussels. But he won plaudits for his “steady hand”, has bailed out Johnson over policy headaches surrounding the fuel crisis and and the response to record crossings of the English Channel by undocumented migrants, and has a “forensic” reputation for lasering in on corruption (and his own colleagues’ lobbying work) in government.

Boris Johnson followed by his principal private secretary, Martin Reynolds (Yui Mok/PA) (PA Wire)

Out

Martin Reynolds

Another adviser told to fall on his sword, “Party Marty”, 53, was Johnson’s principal private secretary and sent the ill-advised jaunty email inviting staff to “BYOB” drinks in the Downing Street garden in May 2020. The former ambassador to Libya was Johnson’s right-hand man when the latter ran the Foreign Office from 2016 to 2018. A powerful member of Johnson’s inner court, “he can and does walk into the PM’s office and exclude all political people ‘on security grounds’”, claimed Dominic Cummings, who accused him of swaying policy and appointments. “Hope someone with a sense of humour sends Martin Reynolds to be ambassador to the UAE or Kuwait or somewhere else it’s illegal to BYOB,” quipped The Daily Telegraph’s Tony Diver.

In

Ed Lister

The man Boris Johnson would dearly love to bring in as Operation Save Big Dog limps towards a final trip to the vet is Lord Udny-Lister, the PM’s old City Hall chum and former chief strategist. Lister, 72, is what the Daily Mail’s Andrew Pierce calls “the working-class grit in the Old Etonian oyster” – he went to a state school in Lambeth and never went to university. The peer once known as Steady Eddie, Lister was leader of flagship Tory Wandsworth council for 19 years, consistently delivering the lowest council tax in the country. He was brought into Downing Street in 2019 alongside fellow former deputy mayor Mirza, but left under a cloud after a string of cronyism allegations after The Times reported he’d been paid by both the buyer and seller of the new site of the Chinese embassy while leading talks over the £255 million deal on behalf of the Government. Both companies insist Lord Udny-Lister took no direct part in the negotiations.

Sir Ed Lister (Getty Images)

Out

Jack Doyle

Doyle, a former Daily Mail politico, was scooped by No 10 to replace Jack Slack as chief of comms – Slack, now the deputy editor of The Sun, had a leaving bash held for him in No 10 the night before the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral, for which he has apologised. Doyle started well, nixing the televised White House-style press briefings Allegra Stratton was set to front, but not before someone got hold of a now-infamous tape of the staffers joking about “fictional” lockdown parties on Downing Street. ITV’s Paul Brand then revealed that Doyle, the son of a policeman, gave a thank you speech and handed out awards at the alleged No 10 Christmas drinks on December 18 that went ahead despite Covid restrictions. Doyle reportedly gave a short speech to his team to thank them for their work, something he apparently does in the office at the end of every week, and gave out jokey awards.

Rosie Bate-Williams (Jeremy Selwyn)

In

Guto Harri

Guto Harri, 55, is used to getting things straight with Johnson: a former BBC chief political correspondent turned PR professional who helped Rupert Murdoch’s News UK after the phone-hacking scandal and worked alongside Johnson during his first term as London mayor in City Hall. Dominic Cummings hates him, tweeting that No 10 has hired “a pro-Remain lobbyist”. Welshman Harri is indeed a Remainer and has been critical of Johnson. Last summer, he was removed as a GB News presenter after taking the knee live on air during a discussion about racism in football. But he also backed his old chum on Partygate. Johnson sees him as one of his “grownups”, albeit a jolly one. “I walked in, I gave him a salute and said ‘Prime Minister, Guto Harri reporting for duty’,” Harri told Welsh language news site Golwg360, “and he stood up from behind his desk and started to salute but then said ‘What am I doing, I should take the knee for you.’” When Harri bluntly asked Johnson “are you going to survive?”, the PM reportedly started singing Gloria Gaynor. “He’s not a complete clown, he’s a very likeable character,” added Harri. The spin machine is off to an interesting start.

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