'Absolutely disgusted': grassroots UK Conservatives turning against PM
Johnson
By Andrew
Macaskill
LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is
facing a revolt by grassroots Conservative supporters who want him to resign
after a series of revelations about parties held at his
official Downing Street residence during national coronavirus lockdowns.
From the West Midlands to Scotland, party members - who raise funds and
rally voters at election time - are turning against a man many of them had
admired for his exuberance, unstuffy if sometimes messy style and his
championing of Brexit.
John Strafford, 80, chairman of the Campaign for Conservative Democracy,
called Johnson the worst prime minister of his lifetime and said the
allegations about him attending parties during the worst health crisis in a
century showed him to be reckless and irresponsible.
"People are absolutely disgusted by it. It is a sign of the
arrogance of the man. The reality is that Boris is a court jester who wants to
be king," he told Reuters.
"His greatest failure is that he has no judgment, and judgment is
the most important quality for any politician."
Johnson was once the darling of the party's grassroots members who
helped secure him a landslide victory in a 2019 election, allowing him to
deliver on promises to finally steer Britain out of the European Union. They
also applauded last year's rapid rollout of COVID-19 vaccines under his
leadership.
'DEEPLY DISAPPOINTED'
But the relationship is rapidly souring under the impact of a steady
stream of revelations about Downing Street's apparent flouting of strict
lockdown rules.
In the latest twist, one guaranteed to upset Conservative supporters,
Johnson's office on Friday had to apologise to Queen Elizabeth after it emerged
that staff had partied in Downing Street on the eve of Prince Philip's funeral
last year, at a time when mixing indoors was banned. read more
Johnson himself was not present at those parties. However, he apologised
to parliament on Wednesday for joining a gathering in the Downing Street garden
on May 20, 2020, when Britain was under a strict lockdown.
While grassroots Conservative members cannot oust a leader, their views
influence lawmakers and they do vote on which of the final two candidates wins
the party's top job in a leadership election.
A senior government official, Sue Gray, is currently investigating the
claims about parties held in government buildings during the lockdowns. Her
report is expected in the next few weeks.
Johnson's supporters hope the report will stop short of saying whether
he knowingly broke any rules or should resign.
But Strafford said that regardless of the report's findings many rank-and-file
members had already made up their minds.
He said his group of Conservatives passed a symbolic vote of
no-confidence in Johnson last month - before the latest damaging revelations -
and his WhatsApp was inundated with messages from party members saying they no
longer support the prime minister.
"The only reason they are not resigning their membership is because
they want to vote in the leadership election, which is now inevitable,"
added Strafford.
Pressure among party loyalists is building nationwide.
In the Conservative stronghold of Sutton Coldfield in the West Midlands,
the local party association passed a motion on Thursday calling for Johnson to
stand down.
Scottish Conservatives have also broken ranks, with their leader Douglas
Ross publicly saying Johnson must resign.
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