There is an old truism that suggests that the Leader of the Conservatives always enjoys the total support of their party until, that is, the day that they do not. So the question is, has that day arrived for Johnson? A thread….
Yesterday was a miserable day for Johnson. William Wragg laid into him from the Tory centre in the Commons. Steve Baker did so from the Tory right, with likely greater political consequence. Only Danny Kruger and Michael Ellis would defend him. The remaining Tories fled.
Labour won the day. Johnson has been referred to the Standards Committee. As Channel 4 pointed out, the allegation is that he lied about Covid parties when it is already the case that more Covid fixed penalty notices have been issued for activity at No. 10 than anywhere else.
There is not a single person who seriously believes Johnson did not lie. And if and when the Met Police ever choose to do the job required of them and conclude their enquiries into some of the simplest cases they might ever have been asked to investigate there will be more fines
There could, in fact, be more than that. The only plausible explanation for police delay is that the Crown Prosecution Service is deciding whether there should be a court case brought against Johnson for serial Covid offences, and running the establishment where so many occurred
Is such a court prosecution possible? We know the CPS is involved. We know that the intention within the Covid regulations was that more serious cases should result in a court trial. Serial offences must make the possibility of Johnson facing that trial a very real one.
Even if he avoids that outcome, and he might, multiple admitted offences will mean the case against Johnson will be overwhelming. Politically, I think yesterday was the day when the Tories admitted that.
The likelihood that the local elections will now be a massive opinion poll rather than an exercise in local democracy does appear to be high, which is to be regretted at one level, and is welcome for the likelihood that this will seal his fate, I suspect.
If 54 Tory MPs have not submitted no confidence letters to the 1922 Committee by May 5 (and after Steve Baker’s intervention I think it likely they will have done) then by May 6 they will.
The likelihood that Johnson will be PM when the Standards Committee get to consider the lies he has told is low, in my opinion. That also happens to increase the likelihood of a serious penalty from them, probably involving exclusion from the House for more than ten days.
That in turn then leads to the possibility, and even likelihood, of a recall petition on Johnson in his constituency. If that happens I am certain the 7,000 or so signatures required to make it happen will be secured. I expect Johnson to be gone as an MP in that case, this year.
I am now so confident of this let’s move on. What then? The only consequence is that the Tories will need a new leader. Raab will, presumably act in the interim. He should enjoy the moment but pray it does not last long. He must be aware he has none of the skills required.
Nor has anyone else now in Cabinet. They were either chosen for their incompetence, or have demonstrated it. Others, like Sunak, Javid and Zahawi have ruled themselves out through their financial dealings. And then there is Truss.
It is not by chance that there are so few clips of Truss available on YouTube. She is kept away from video cameras because she is so hopeless. The few clips there are include her classic speeches on cheese and pork.
No one wanting to caricature an incompetent politician could have come up with something like those appalling speeches. The Tories already know she would be an electoral disaster. I really cannot see her winning support from MPs.
So who might? The far-right can’t take this. Steve Baker might be a kingmaker, but he cannot claim the Crown. I think he knows it. There is no one else there.
So, the Tories have to pick from outside the existing Cabinet, and not from the far right. That leaves Tom Tugendhat and Jeremy Hunt. The firmer is virtually unknown, having risen only to be a Commons Committee chair. Hunt lost to Johnson.
Hunt has to be front runner, but so too was Sunak recently. These things can change, but I happen to think the Tory instinct for power now comes into play. With Johnson ruined, and his policies with him, the MPs will want six things.
First, many of them will want preferment and much of Johnson’s Cabinet is ripe to be culled, from Rees-Mogg onwards. Hunt may be willing to offer many the Right Honourable tag they crave as a Cabinet Minister.
Second, they have seen Hunt in front of cameras. I don’t like him. But they know he can withstand the heat. That will count very strongly for him.
Third, he knows he can’t reverse Brexit, but can try to make it work. That is all the Tories can hope to salvage from its wreckage now. He has more chance of doing that than anyone else now.
Fourth, he is the person Labour least want. As a seemingly reasonable person he can add the stability the Tories crave, at least electorally after Johnson.
Fifth, that I cannot be sure what Hunt stands for helps him. The Tories can project themselves onto him for long enough for him to become Leader.
Sixth, Tugendhat has none of these things going for him. And I cannot see anyone else winning, but I may be wrong of course.
Then what? Expect four things. One will be moderation with the EU. There will be a charm offensive and an offer of cooperation to make it look like Brexit can work without the logjams. That this will neuter the project does not matter. It will be called making Brexit work.
There will be full cooperation with Ireland as a result. For the sake of peace that will matter.
At the Treasury, Sunak will be long gone. The spending tap will be opened. Whether wisely or not I do not know, but spending will happen. The Tories will be intent on buying their way back to power.
That will be linked to green issues. The Tories have to buy the young, and they will try to do so.
And Hunt would be ruthless in holding his right-wing at bay. Johnson used expulsions to win power. Hunt could do the same. He will challenge them to bring him down, when they know many will lose their seats if they do.
In other words, he could be a nightmare for Labour. Don’t rule the Tories out yet. There are 2.5 years to a general election as yet. A lot could happen. Including me being wrong and Sunak becoming Leader despite it all. In which case Labour could laugh their way to victory.
To summarise: Johnson is toast, but to think that means the Tories are necessarily down and out would be far too big an assumption to make. We still live in interesting, and potentially dangerous, times.

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More from @RichardJMurphy

Apr 12
It has to be said that things have a habit of not going to plan at present. I could not have guessed how 2020 would progress at the start of that year. I am expecting 2022 to be the same. A thread….
I began the year without a lot of optimism. But I did not really expect war in Ukraine, although the risk existed. I hung to the hope that Putin was not that callously stupid, but he was.
I similarly hung to a hope that the Tories would not really want to create a recession. I was wrong on that too.
Read 27 tweets
Apr 9
After a couple of days of media storm around the tax affairs of Rishi Sunak and his wife, Akshata Murty, on which I have offered an opinion or two, there are still questions to ask, including can Sunak survive? Another thread….
We still do not know the answers to all the questions that arise as a result of this affair, and the emergence Sunak having had a green card in the USA until 2021 and his wife ‘voluntarily’ paying tax certainly complicates things.
Regarding the green card, there are a number of issues. Tax is not one of them. He likely paid more tax as a result. But question as to loyalties do matter and it’s clear a Sunak kept his US residence option open for a year after being Chancellor.
Read 26 tweets
Apr 8
I spent yesterday writing about the technicalities of domicile as they might impact Rishi Sunak’s wife. But that’s because her tax decisions cast doubt on his suitability for office. Another thread, this time in the man himself ….
Sunak shot to prominence in 2020 when appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer. Although not quite unknown before then, few had paid him much attention.
Even his appointment as Chancellor looked as much like luck as anything else. He’d managed to be promoted through the ranks of obscure ministers to hold the number 2 position at the Treasury when Sajid Javid resigned. Appointing him saved a reshuffle, so he got the job.
Read 29 tweets
Apr 7
It’s been reported that the Chancellor’s wife, Akshata Murthy, is not tax domiciled in the UK. This has been confirmed by a statement issued on her behalf. But I think the statement of facts issued by her is wrong. And I also suggest HMRC could challenge this claim. A thread….
I need to report what a spokeswoman for Murthy has said, which was: “Akshata Murthy is a citizen of India, the country of her birth and parents’ home. India does not allow its citizens to hold the citizenship of another country simultaneously. (Continues in next tweet)
So, according to British law, Ms Murthy is treated as non-domiciled for UK tax purposes. She has always and will continue to pay UK taxes on all her UK income.” I would have hoped that Ms Murthy could buy advice that was right, but this statement is wrong.
Read 23 tweets
Apr 6
Suppose the viewers of @Channel4 really did not want to watch a Murdoch / Amazon / Netflix / Apple owned channel in the future and decided to do something about it. Suppose they decided to buy it instead…. a thread…..
@Channel4 has been put up for sale by Nadine Dorries. The idea horrifies many. No one but a few dogmatists on the far-right of politics can see a gain from this. They, though, want another platform for their message. Suppose the viewers decided to stop them. Could they?
Clearly they could. At a maximum 7 million people watch @Channel4 (the Bake Off). @Channel4News manages an average of 750,000. Let’s suppose the latter number really care about the future of the Channel.
Read 9 tweets
Apr 3
It would cost around £50 billion to save people from the hunger, the cold, the poverty and the despair they are now facing. That money is available tonight. It would take a few keystrokes on a Bank of England keyboard to create it, instantly. So why won’t the government do it?
I am sure some will say this is just the magic money tree at work. And in the very short term it is, just as was used to get us through Covid. But in this case money creation would save the economy from collapse as the people heading for poverty could continue to spend.
And when you ensure that millions of families can continue to spend what they would otherwise be unable to do then you provide millions of others with the income they need to prevent them going into poverty too. In economics we call this the multiplier effect.
Read 9 tweets

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