Minggu, 26 Juni 2022

Boris Johnson 'right person' to lead Tories into next general election, says cabinet minister Brandon Lewis - Sky News

Boris Johnson is capable of winning the next general election, a cabinet colleague has insisted, as he claimed the ability to look forward is "a good thing" after the prime minister said he was eyeing a third term.

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis threw his support behind the Tory leader, amid fresh criticism and plots to oust him after the Conservatives suffered two by-election defeats.

It comes as Mr Johnson said he was confident of winning the next election and was "thinking actively" about a third term, despite recent political turmoil.

A Downing Street source has suggested he may have been joking.

The last few days alone saw the resignation of cabinet minister Oliver Dowden, after the Tories lost their former stronghold of Tiverton and Honiton to the Liberal Democrats and the red wall seat of Wakefield to Labour.

The electoral beatings have reignited questions within the Conservative Party over Mr Johnson's leadership, following a recent Tory revolt by MPs.

Speaking to Trevor Phillips on Sky News' Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme, Mr Lewis acknowledged the party had suffered "a bad set of results".

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He said: "That does happen sometimes mid-term. There's no denying it was a set of results we've got to look carefully at and learn from.

"What we've got to do, as has happened before, where we've seen by-election results go one way and then a following general election go a very different way, you can't extrapolate… a by-election result into a general election result.

"It's been proven time and again to not work that way."

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Rallying to the support of Mr Johnson, he said: "One of the things we have seen in the last couple of the days is his zest and enthusiasm to deliver for the country.

"I think Boris Johnson is the right person to take us into the next general election. I think he will do that successfully."

He added: "He's proven that time and again, where people have written him off, both before London elections and before in the 2019 election, and then we've been able to come back and win, and win successfully. And I think he's got the ability to do that."

Mr Lewis argued the PM looking to the long term was an asset.

He said: "What I see is somebody whose got that drive and enthusiasm for what we want to achieve for our country.

"Having that ability to look forward is a good thing.

"This is somebody I think who is capable of winning a general election, delivering for our country."

He added: "What I want is a prime minister who is not thinking about the next few months, but he is thinking about that long term change we need in our country.

"I'm very clear. I want our country to have a Conservative-led government for a very, very long time.

"I want a prime minister who's looking at the long term, and doing so with enthusiasm and focus.

"That's what we've got in Boris Johnson and that's why I support him, and will continue to."

Meanwhile, speaking at the G7 summit in Germany, when asked if he was delusional by talking about being prime minister into the 2030s, Mr Johnson said: "What I'm saying is this is a government that is getting on with delivering for the people of this country and we've got a huge amount to do."

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Labour frontbencher David Lammy told Phillips the by-election defeats had been a "very, very sorry night" for the Tory government.

He said: Labour is on its way back and it's on its way back for two reasons.

"One because we are now the party of change in this country.

"And two because we are winning Tory votes - people who voted Tory now voting Labour.

"That's what we need to do to form the next government. And that is what is happening."

He also played down the possibility of a deal with the Liberal Democrats going into the next general election.

Mr Lammy said: "I don't think the voters of Britain want politicians to stitch up deals in the corridors of power.

"People expect to make their own judgment and decide who they want to vote for."

But Liberal Democrats' deputy leader Daisy Cooper did not rule out a future pact describing it as a "hypothetical situation".

She told Phillips: "Liberal Democrats will continue to try and win seats off the Conservatives in areas where we are the key challengers.

"If you look at the last two years, things have changed so much, nobody has expected the pandemic or anything else, we simply can't work out what will happen in the future."

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2022-06-26 08:27:06Z
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