Guto Harri is appointed as new No10 comms chief… just weeks after blasting Boris
First day of Boris’s ‘grown ups’ turns into circus: PM has to defend new comms chief ‘Huawei’ Harri as he pulls water stunt, reveals details of PM singing Gloria Gaynor’s I will Survive and reminders of what he REALLY thinks of Johnson resurface
Guto Harri, 54, is a proud Remainer and ex-BBC reporter who became lobbyist after leaving City Hall in 2012Last job in journalism was at GB News – but he left shortly after taking knee on air to support BLM movementHe quit after being suspended, accusing the new channel of pandering to ‘far right’ after the row he causedHarri is a remainer who said that Brexit was ‘act of self-harm for the UK’ that had also ‘destroyed’ Mr JohnsonOver the past month he has also criticised his boss’ failure to ‘get a grip’ on ‘toxic’ partygate scandal
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Boris Johnson was forced to defend his new spin doctor within hours of him starting work today after it was revealed he was lobbying the Government for Huawei and then spilled the beans about the Prime Minister singing ‘I Will Survive’ when he asked whether he was going to keep his job.
The Prime Minister laughed uncomfortably as he was asked if he had serenaded Guto Harri with the Gloria Gaynor disco anthem to reassure his new director of communications, telling ITV News: ‘We are focused completely on the big problems the country faces’.
The Tory leader’s fresh start after the Partygate scandal immediately turned into a farrago today after Mr Harri, hailed as a ‘hugely experienced, proper grown up’, started playing up to the cameras as he arrived in Downing Street for the first time.
A smiling Mr Harri, 54, appeared to take a swipe at the party culture in No 10 by bringing in mineral water and healthy snacks for colleagues while swinging his carrier bag from the Tesco Express at Westminster Underground station.
Later that morning he revealed in an interview with a little-known Welsh language website that the Prime Minister offered to take the knee for him – a reference to the stunt that saw him quit GB News last year – before serenading him with the disco hit ‘I Will Survive’.
He also damned his new boss with faint praise by claiming he is ‘not all clownish’ and ‘a very likeable character’, insisting that since starting work ’90 per cent of our discussion was very serious’.
And in another blow it was confirmed at lunchtime that over the past two years he had lobbied the Government on behalf of tech giant Huawei, who were barred from building the UK’s 5G network amid claims the Chinese state could use it to spy on the British.
At a Lobby briefing this afternoon, with Mr Harri in the room, the PM’s spokesman said: ‘He provided advice to the clients of a private company. That’s entirely legitimate, it’s in the public domain and obviously we would not exclude from Government someone with valuable experience and expertise.’
Mr Harri’s first day in the job was branded ‘comedy’ by Tory backbencher Chris Loder, one of the original so-called ‘Pork Pie plotters’ from the 2019 intake of new MPs said to have been working to remove the PM from office. Tweeting about claims Mr Johnson sang Gloria Gaynor to Mr Harri he said: ‘Looking forward to hearing that rendition at the 1922’.
The new No 10 spin doctor told Welsh language publication Golwg360 he met with the PM to take the job at 5pm on Friday. He said: ‘I walked in and did a salute and said “Prime Minister, Guto Harri reporting for duty” and he stood up from behind his desk and started taking the salute but then he said: “What am I doing, I should take the knee for you”.
‘And we both laughed. Then I asked: “Are you going to survive Boris?” And he said in his deep, slow and purposeful voice and started to sing a little while finishing the sentence and saying “I Will Survive”.
‘I inevitably invited him to say “You’ve got all your life to live” and he replied: “I’ve got all my love to give”, so we had a little blast from Gloria Gaynor. No one expects that, but it was. There was a lot of laughter and we sat down to have a serious conversation about how to get the Government back on track and how we are moving forward’.
He added: ‘He’s not all that clownish, but he’s a very likeable character. 90 per cent of our discussion was very serious but it shows that he is a character and has fun. He is not a vicious man as some misrepresent him.’
And in 2018 he wrote: ‘I miss the old Boris Johnson – the man of principle with an exquisite gift of expression who got a lot done as Mayor of London and used to charm people. I fear that man hasn’t been around for quite a while’.
Guto Harri, the prime minister’s new director of communications, arrives in Downing Street with healthy snacks and water for colleagues in his first day in No 10
Guto Harri left GB News last year after he was publicly reprimanded by the channel’s ‘anti-woke’ bosses for taking the knee live on television in protest at the racist abuse aimed at black England football stars
Mr Harri admitted he had taken the job yesterday – after meeting the PM on Friday, sharing a light-hearted picture with actor Peter Capaldi, who played Malcolm Tucker in The Thick of It
Mr Harri, pictured with Boris in 2014, worked for him at City Hall for four years before going into communications and lobbying roles
Mr Harri has appeared frequently on the BBC to slam the PM over Brexit and Partygate in particular (pictured last month on Newsnight)
Despite being hailed as a ‘proper grown up’ after taking the job 72 hours ago, the Downing Street circus took another colourful twist as Mr Harri played up to the cameras when he arrived at No 10 this morning waving a Tesco bag of mineral water and ‘healthy snacks’ for colleagues.
But in the same interview with a little known Welsh-language website he also revealed the Prime Minister offered to take the knee for him before serenading the staunch Remainer with a blast of Gloria Gaynor’s disco anthem ‘I Will Survive’ when he agreed to take the job.
But just a fortnight ago he was laying into his new boss about his integrity and once said he was ‘digging his political grave’ by joking about ‘suicide vests’ and being ‘sexually incontinent’. And in 2018 he wrote:
Speaking to Newsnight on January 26 about party-after-party on Mr Johnson’s watch he said: ‘The problem is that nobody seems to be getting a grip, and the prime minister has to invite an inquiry to conclude what went on in his own house’.
Mr Harri worked for Boris at City Hall from 2008 to 2012, before working in several communications roles, most recently at Hawthorn Advisors, where he lobbied on behalf of tech giant Huawei, who are banned from the UK’s 5G infrastructure in case they spy for China.
Before taking the job as Mr Johnson’s spokesman over the weekend, speaking to the BBC’s Newscast podcast on January 26, Harri appeared to question how honest the PM is.
He admitted that when it came to Mr Johnson’s integrity it was ‘hard to judge and different people will come to different conclusions’.
He added: ‘Boris has always underestimated how critical it is to have a fantastic team around him. And I don’t think, even if he can pull this back, he will be allowed to do it unless he promises to his party that he’s going to overhaul that machinery so the kind of nonsense that has happened and the bad stuff that has happened over the last weeks and months will never happen again.’
Earlier in the month he also laid into the ‘unforgivable’ 16 or so parties that took place in No 10 and Whitehall when 66million Britons were banned from meeting anyone, or limited to seeing one other person but threatened with fines if they sat on a bench.
Mr Harri had said Mr Johnson needed to get on with a ‘really grovelling apology’ and predicted more parties would emerge – and he was right.
He told BBC 2’s Newsnight: ‘I think we can safely assume that there were many more gatherings because it seems to be a pattern. Somebody needs to put them in context and explain, yes maybe they’re unforgivable, but they’re also understandable in some ways’.
His heavy criticism of the Johnson administration continues in November 2020, just after Dominic Cummings left No 10.
Writing in the Daily Telegraph, the newspaper that Mr Johnson has written for for years before entering Downing Street, had ‘been relentlessly causing offence’ and that he had seen ‘his broad church narrowed to a sect’.
He added that ‘the communications strategy during this Covid crisis has been a masterclass in incompetence’.
Mr Harri, a proud Welshman who voted for Remain has been critical of his boss’ stance on Brexit.
When the now PM was manoeuvring to replace Theresa May as party leader, quitting as foreign secretary in July 2018, Mr Harri argued that Brexit had ‘destroyed’ him, insisting ‘because nobody genuinely believes that he was sincere about it.’
Months later he launched his most blistering attack. He was angry that Johnson accused Theresa May of agreeing a Brexit deal that was wrapping ‘a suicide vest around the British constitution’.
Mr Harri told the BBC: ‘Unfortunately, he is now dragging us into a place where we think that we can joke about suicide vests and that we can be sexually incontinent.
‘He was a huge unifying figure when the Olympics happened in London. He would not have been reelected in a left-leaning city if he hadn’t appealed to the left. Now he’s gone the other way. He’s become more tribal’, adding that if he became PM he would become ‘a hugely divisive figure.’
Mr Harri was previously the BBC’s chief political correspondent and returned to broadcasting in 2018, working for Welsh free-to-air channel S4C.
Last year he quit GB News following a row over him taking the knee on air during a debate about racism directed at England football players.
Mr Harri, 55, reportedly decided to leave the channel after he was suspended following a viewer backlash over his action.
Then Mayor of London Boris Johnson arriving at the East London Mosque with his Director of Communication Guto Harri in 2009
Writing in the Sunday Times about his experience on GB News, the former broadcaster said: ‘I joined part-time but with an ongoing commitment, because I liked and trusted those in charge and supported the broad vision.
‘But the channel is rapidly becoming an absurd parody of what it proclaimed to be.
‘Rather than defending free speech and confronting cancel culture, it has set out to replicate it on the far right.’
Born in Cardiff, Mr Harri studied at the University of Oxford and later took a postgraduate course in journalism at Cardiff University.
Between working for Mr Johnson and for GB News, he became director of communications for News UK in 2012 following the fallout from the phone-hacking scandal.
In an alumni blog post on Cardiff University’s website, Mr Harri described the role as a ‘shock to the system’.
‘I’m very proud of the part that I played in allowing those people to be journalists again and not be seen as phone hackers and corrupters of public life,’ he wrote.
Mr Harri said in the same post he was ‘surprised, disappointed and arguably distraught’ about Mr Johnson’s leadership of the Leave campaign.
In the same year, Mr Harri also took aim at Mr Johnson over a series of controversial remarks which he said were doing ‘enormous damage’ to his former boss’s political prospects.
He accused Mr Johnson of ‘digging his political grave’ and warned he would be ‘hugely divisive’ as a Prime Minister.
At the time, Mr Johnson faced a Tory backlash over his claim that Theresa May’s Brexit strategy had put the UK in a ‘suicide vest’ and handed the detonator to Brussels.
Mr Harri added that Mr Johnson was ‘dragging us into a place where we think that we can joke about suicide vests and that we can be sexually incontinent’.
He told BBC Radio 4’s The Week in Westminster: ‘I fear that Boris is digging. Somebody needs to take the spade out of his hand or it looks to me like he’s digging his political grave.
‘It’s one thing to deploy humour and charm and intellect and all these things he has in spades which he has done brilliantly in the past, not least his exquisite gift of language.
‘But at the moment it is being deployed in a really destructive and self-destructive way that I think is doing enormous damage to him as well as to the country.
‘People always said he shot from the hip and used language loosely or gaffed. It was always very calculated.
‘It was just calculated in a very, very clever way in the past. Over a period of time, Boris did move from celebrity to statesman and did widen his appeal enormously.
‘He was a huge unifying figure by the end of my time with him when the Olympics happened in London.
‘There were people on left and right. He would not have been re-elected in a left leaning city like London if he hadn’t appealed to the left.
‘Now he’s gone the other way. He’s become more tribal, and tribal within the tribe, so that he would now be – if he were to become leader – a hugely divisive figure.
‘And that for somebody who is equipped to be a unifying figure, who’s equipped to create a feel-good factor, who’s equipped to take us all on whatever journey because he makes it fun, he makes it exciting and he is a true visionary.
‘Unfortunately he is now dragging us into a place where we think that we can joke about suicide vests and that we can be sexually incontinent.’
The PM wrote to all Tory MPs to promise them a greater say in the making of Government policy. He guaranteed them a ‘direct line into 10 Downing Street’, as he fights for his job
We ARE working together… honest! Boris and Rishi put on awkward show of unity as they are compared to warring Blair and Brown after Chancellor ‘blocks’ NHS waiting list catch-up plan – amid fears PM’s authority is waning despite ‘reset’
Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak put on an awkward show of unity today after the Chancellor was accused of blocking a multi-billion pound NHS catch-up plan.
The PM insisted they were ‘working together in harmony’ and he had ‘absolutely’ no doubts about Mr Sunak’s loyalty as the pair visited a cancer treatment centre in Kent.
Mr Johnson did unveil a target that no-one will have to wait more than two months for a cancer diagnosis by March 2023. But he had been hoping to unveil a full blueprint for tackling the record backlog for treatments, as he scrambles to get his premiership back on track.
But the publication of the NHS elective recovery plan has been bumped as ministers failed to sign off the draft document.
Health service insiders suggested the Chancellor is dragging his feet, and compared the situation to the way Gordon Brown hampered Tony Blair’s policies towards the end of his time in power. There is speculation the Treasury is demanding tough targets in return for funding – although Sajid Javid blamed Omicron for the delay.
Speaking to reporters without Mr Sunak this afternoon, Mr Johnson said: ‘Everybody in No 10 and the Treasury are working together in harmony to deal with the big problems that the country faces and clearing the Covid backlogs.’
The £12billion a year national insurance hike coming in from April is being allocated to the NHS and social care reforms, with £5.9billion earmarked for investing in elective surgery, diagnostics, and technology over the next three years
The hold-up will fuel anxiety about Mr Johnson’s authority after the Partygate crisis sparked a welter of calls from Tories for him to quit. Mr Sunak, seen as a potential successor, last week pointedly disowned a jibe Mr Johnson made at Keir Starmer for failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile.
The PM moved to ‘reset’ his top team over the weekend by bringing in former journalist Guto Harri as his communications director, and making Cabinet minister Steve Barclay his chief of staff.
He is expected to make more appointments in the coming days, as well as carrying out a mini-reshuffle of the government’s much-criticised whipping operation.
As the intense manoeuvring continued in Westminster today:
Mr Johnson has laughed off a revelation from Mr Harri that the PM sang Gloria Gaynor’s ‘I will survive’ as they talked about him taking a job in Downing Street; Mr Harri also took a swipe at the Partygate drinking culture in No10 by arriving for his first day carrying mineral water and healthy snacks; Mr Javid lashed out at ‘sexist’ attacks on the PM’s wife Carrie over her influence in Downing Street; The new No10 policy head has vowed to reconnect the MP with backbench Tories and hinted that taxes will be cut soon; Mr Javid said he has ‘100 per cent’ confidence in the PM and insisted there will not be a leadership contest soon; Dominic Cummings is threatening to drop more revelations about the refurbishment of the PM’s grace-and-favour flat.
Boris Johnson (right) and Rishi Sunak (left) put on a show of unity during a visit to an oncology centre in Maidstone today
Boris Johnson (pictured out jogging this morning) had been hoping to unveil a blueprint for tackling the record backlog for treatments, as he scrambles to get his premiership back on track
Health service insiders suggested the Chancellor (pictured with Mr Johnson today) is dragging his feet, and compared the situation to the way Gordon Brown hampered Tony Blair’s policies towards the end of his time in power
Sajid Javid (right) blamed Omicron for delays to the NHS catch-up. Mr Sunak pictured left on a visit to the cancer centre in Kent today
Asked if he ever worried Mr Sunak might be after his job, Mr Johnson said: ‘I think that what we’re doing is working together across the whole of Government to fix the Covid backlogs which, believe me, is a massive priority for us, for everybody in the country.’
Pressed on whether he had doubts about the Chancellor’s loyalty, Mr Johnson said: ‘Absolutely not.’
He added: ‘What I would say is that it’s thanks to the investment that we’re able to put in, thanks to the sound management of the economy, everything that we did, if you think about it, all the looking after business throughout the pandemic, that’s enabled our economy to bounce back so well, that in turn enables us to put the investment that we need now in the NHS.’
Mr Johnson told journalists at Maidstone Hospital that he was focusing ‘beyond Westminster’.
‘I think what people want is for the Government to focus, not on stuff going on at Westminster, but to focus on life… beyond Westminster, and to focus on the needs of the country. And that is what we’re doing.’
He also sidestepped questions over whether people are entitled to criticise the role played by his wife, Carrie, after a series of revelations about her role in a new book by former Tory peer Lord Ashcroft.
The PM said: ‘I think it’s entirely fair for people to focus on the issues that I’m focused on and that is number one, our priority, which is to tackle the Covid backlogs and rebuild our economy.’
Downing Street said further personnel changes would be announced ‘in the coming days’ as it was confirmed an aide seen as close to Mrs Johnson had left No10.
Special adviser Henry Newman is returning to work for his former boss Michael Gove and has left in a ‘mutually agreed decision with the Prime Minister’.
The PM’s official spokesman said there would be further changes ‘in the coming days’.
‘We still need to announce the new permanent secretary for No 10, for example. So there will be additional recruitment into No 10 and there’s an ongoing process for the PPS (principal private secretary) role too, so that needs to be announced.’
Earlier, Mr Javid said the plans would be published ‘shortly’, arguing that Omicron had already forced the government to hold off in December.
He told Sky News: ‘We will publish the plan shortly. What I would say about the Treasury is that I couldn’t wish for a better partner when it comes to the challenges I have. I don’t recognise that (suggestion) at all.
‘Having been chancellor, having a close relationship with the Treasury, having a strong partnership for any department is crucial and right now for health and care I am just really pleased we have got that really good working relationship.’
A Treasury source denied that Mr Sunak had blocked the publication of the plan.
‘We didn’t block, the NHS agreed with us it’s not ready yet,’ the source said.
But Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said: ‘Increasingly getting the sense that Johnson now faces the same (but more intense and short-term) challenges Tony Blair had in his third term, namely that HMT (HM Treasury) is loath to agree to any No 10 plans involving money, as the Chancellor sees these as opportunistic and wasted on a dying administration.’
Mr Taylor worked as head of policy in No 10 under Mr Blair.
Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, has called for a plan to deal with the NHS backlog in England to be published ‘as quickly as possible’.
She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘We need to see this plan as quickly as possible because trust leaders are really keen to plough on and make their way through these very long waiting lists which have built up during the pandemic, and indeed pre-existed the pandemic.
‘What we’re waiting for is a set of priorities and measures and procedures that will be put in place to support trusts, to enable them to boost their activity levels, so it will be measures to free up clinician times, it will be measures to support trusts to work more effectively together.
‘Critically, it will be measures to help to keep patients well while they wait for their procedures and also be how, perhaps, the independent sector might be used and really importantly, it will be how that £8 billion worth of funding will be allocated, so there is a lot of detail still to see.’
New No10 communications director Guto Harri arriving for his first day of work
Although the full recovery plan to bring down waits for hospital operations has been delayed, Mr Javid is announcing part of it today.
A planned radical overhaul of hospital operations may allow patients to find out the waiting time at their local hospital.
In the future it is understood people could be able to ‘shop around’ for the hospital with the shortest waiting list and book themselves in for a procedure there directly, no matter where in the country it is.
The major change to planned operations such as hip replacements and cataract surgery will begin being introduced this month. Anyone booked in for surgery will be able to better understand how long they are likely to wait to go under the knife at their local hospital.
It is part of the NHS’s My Planned Care Platform, set up to help tackle the backlog of almost six million people waiting for operations following the pandemic.
The scheme also involves the roll-out of more than 100 diagnostic centres, providing tests and scans to push people through the healthcare system more rapidly.
The Department of Health and Social Care says a third of on-the-day operation cancellations happen because people are not medically ready for treatment, for example because they have a long-term condition, such as diabetes or high blood pressure, which has not been managed properly.
The new plan will also involve getting fit for surgery, such as providing advice on a better diet and exercise, or help to stop smoking.
Mr Javid said: ‘At the height of the pandemic the NHS rightly focused on treating Covid-19 patients, but sadly it has meant waiting lists have risen – and the Covid backlog is going to keep rising. This platform… will help us ensure access to life-changing care and support for people no matter who they are or where they live.’
The platform will be launched on the NHS website later this month and is hoped to be added to the NHS app in the future.
In October Sir James Mackey, who is advising NHS England on dealing with the backlog of care, told an event run by the Health Foundation that the ‘waiting experience is handled very badly’.
He said: ‘People go into the system, get referred to the system, and have almost no interaction that gives them confidence of where they are in the queue, what’s going to happen next, and have no control over that – and I think that’s fundamentally wrong.’
The platform will include waiting times and information to help people manage their conditions while they wait for treatment.
Mr Javid today pleaded for Tories to ‘move on’ from plotting against Boris Johnson as the PM desperately tries to ‘reset’ his government.
The Health Secretary said he was ‘100 per cent’ backing Mr Johnson and predicted there will not be a leadership contest, despite months of rising unrest in the Conservative ranks.
The comments came as one would-be successor, backbencher Tom Tugendhat made clear there will be a move against the premier unless his overhaul of No10 staff works. Mr Tugendhat also renewed his call for the £12billion national insurance hike to be abandoned – a popular rallying cry among Tories.
Meanwhile, Dominic Cummings is expected to publish more allegations about Mr Johnson’s controversial refurbishment of the Downing Street flat, as he continues his campaign to evict him from power.
The PM launched a bid to stabilise his No10 operation over the weekend following a series of dramatic departures.
Cabinet minister Steve Barclay has become Mr Johnson’s new chief of staff, while former journalist and long-time ally Guto Harri is the new No10 director of communications.
No10 is believed to be lining up Dame Emily Lawson as the permanent secretary in a new PM department this week.
Dame Emily, who currently runs NHS England’s vaccination programme, was seconded to Downing Street’s delivery unit – a team in charge of ensuring the Government delivers on its policies – in April last year before returning to the health service in October.
In an extraordinary interview with Welsh language website view360, Mr Harri revealed that Mr Johnson sang ‘I Will Survive’ to persuade him to take the job. He also took the knee in an apparently reference to Mr Harri’s decision to do the same on GB News.
‘I walked in and did a salute and said ‘ Prime Minister, Guto Harri reporting for duty’ and he stood up from behind his desk and started taking the salute but then he said ‘What am I doing, I should take the knee for you,’ the No10 spin chief said according to a Google translation.
‘And we both laughed. Then I asked ‘ Are you going to survive Boris? ‘And he said in his deep, slow and purposeful voice and started to sing a little while finishing the sentence and saying ‘ I Will Survive ‘.
‘I inevitably invited him to say ‘ You’ve got all your life to live’ and he replied, ‘ I’ve got all my love to give’, so we had a little blast from Gloria Gaynor!
‘No one expects that, but it was.
‘There was a lot of laughter and we sat down to have a serious conversation about how to get the Government back on track and how we are moving forward,’ he added.
Mr Harri insisted the recent Partygate row had ‘nothing to do with the way people voted two years ago’.
And he argued that while Mr Johnson is a ‘very likeable character’ he is not ‘clownish’.
The beleaguered leader has been left badly wounded by the Partygate saga, with a police investigation still hanging over his head.
His refusal to apologise for a ‘slur’ about Keir Starmer’s failure to prosecute Jimmy Savile also enraged many Tories – and sparked the resignation of his long-standing aide Munira Mirza.
Tory MP Andrew Griffith has now taken over from Ms Mirza as head of the Downing Street policy unit.
The government is also battling to quell panic over the rising cost of living and looming hike in national insurance.
Asked in a round of interviews this morning if the PM has his full confidence, Mr Javid told BBC Breakfast: ‘Absolutely, 100 per cent, and I’ll tell you why.
‘Because despite the challenges, and of course there are many, we are delivering, this Prime Minister is delivering. When he was elected with a record majority, so many commitments rightly were made to the British people.
‘He’s saved this country from Corbynism, he’s delivered on Brexit, we’re getting on with the job of levelling up, he’s delivered the most successful vaccination programme in Europe, the biggest booster programme in Europe, making us the freest country in Europe and we have the fastest growing economy in the G7.’
Mr Javid told Sky News: ‘I don’t think there is going to be a leadership election. We have got a leader in place who is doing an excellent job, is getting on with the job, is delivering on the commitments that we made, and I am there to support him, along with the rest of us.’
Mr Javid said it was time to ‘move on’ from the controversy over the Prime Minister’s attack on Sir Keir Starmer over the CPS’s failure to prosecute Jimmy Savile when he was director of public prosecutions – a claim which had widely been discredited.
Mr Tugendhat – the only Tory who has formally declared they want to take over from Mr Johnson – took to the airwaves again this morning.
He laid down a marker by insisting that Mr Johnson’s fate will hang on the success of his shake-up.
BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I think the Prime Minister has just done his reset, let’s see what Number 10 brings out because there’s an awful lot of talent going in, as you know, there’s an awful lot of talent coming out, and let’s see what changes are.
‘I mean this is a decision clearly for 360 or so members of Parliament and let’s see where it goes to, but I think the point remains that we’ve got to be looking at the future, we’ve got to be looking at what’s best for the British people and focus absolutely on how we achieve the results that we really need for this country’.
He went on to say: ‘This is a time when we need to be really focused on what politics is actually here for, and that’s helping others and not getting into some sort of personal psychodrama’.
Asked if the ‘personal psychodrama’ could finish with an end to the Prime Minister’s leadership, Mr Tugendhat, who intends to stand for Tory leader if Mr Johnson is voted out, said: ‘Well it depends how the reset goes. Going into a leadership election is hardly ending a psychodrama.’
Andrew Griffith (left) has become the head of the Downing Street policy unit. Dominic Cummings (right) is expected to publish more allegations about Mr Johnson’s controversial refurbishment of the Downing Street flat
Mr Johnson has promised fundamental change to reassure his restive troops. Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said yesterday: ‘I think the Prime Minister has been very clear that he wants a reset in No 10.
‘He was very clear speaking to Conservative MPs on Monday and what we saw last week was him following through with that commitment.’
According to The Times, Mr Barclay and Mr Harri joined the PM at Chequers over the weekend to start work on building a more ‘grown-up’ Government.
Mr Kwarteng urged those still unsure about Mr Johnson’s future to give him the ‘time and space’ to lead.
Former Cabinet minister Robert Jenrick warned last night that ‘it is undoubtedly true that public concern is very deep, the damage to the party’s reputation is serious, and will take a considerable effort to change that’ and that he had ‘a great deal of sympathy for many of those colleagues who have come out and said that they feel that change is necessary’.
But he told BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour: ‘There’s also very little public appetite for the Conservative Party – at this moment in time, when we’re facing a cost of living crisis and insecurity abroad – to descend into a leadership contest and all the damage that does.’
Thrown under a bus to save Boris and Carrie: PM clears out chief of staff ‘Party’ Marty Reynolds and comms chief Jack Doyle and brings in minister Steve Barclay and former GB News presenter Guto Harri as allies claim the ‘grown-ups are back in charge’
Boris Johnson‘s new-look No10 team starts work today after a turbulent week in Downing Street that saw senior aides to take the blame for Partygate.
The Prime Minister made key changes over the weekend, appointing Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Steve Barclay as his new chief of staff and journalist and long-time ally Guto Harri as his head of communications.
And The Times reported No 10 was hoping to announce the return of Dame Emily Lawson as the new permanent secretary this week.
He had already unveiled MP Andrew Griffiths as the head of the Downing Street policy unit after the departure of Munira Mirza, the only unplanned departure from his top team last week.
After she stepped down on Thursday, attacking the PM over a Jimmy Savile-linked attack on Keir Starmer, the PM used the furore to make public the defenestration of three other top figures.
Dan Rosenfield was removed as chief of staff and Martin Reynolds as his principal private secretary. Reynolds was dubbed ‘Party Marty’ after his key role in organising a BYOB drinks event in the Downing Street garden. Rosenfield paid the price for the drinking culture and indiscipline in No10. Communications Director Jack Doyle also stepped down after two years.
Mr Johnson is expected to make more appointments in the coming days, as well as carrying out a mini-reshuffle of the government’s much-criticised whipping operation.
Chief whip Mark Spencer, who has come in for major criticism, seems almost certain to be removed.
It comes as the PM tries to see off questions of whether he himself can continue in power, with Tory MPs rebellious and his poll position dire after months of scandals.
Downing Street said further personnel changes would be announced ‘in the coming days’ as it was confirmed an aide seen as close to Carrie Johnson had left No 10.
Special adviser Henry Newman is returning to work for his former boss Michael Gove and has left in a ‘mutually agreed decision with the Prime Minister’.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said there would be further changes ‘in the coming days’.
‘We still need to announce the new permanent secretary for No 10, for example. So there will be additional recruitment into No 10 and there’s an ongoing process for the PPS (principal private secretary) role too, so that needs to be announced.’
On the ministerial side, some of new chief of staff Stephen Barclay’s Cabinet Office role will be ‘shared among Cabinet Office ministers’.
He we look at the ins and outs in Downing Street:
The Prime Minister made key changes over the weekend, appointing Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Steve Barclay as his new chief of staff and journalist and long-time ally Guto Harri as his head of communications.
CHIEF OF STAFF
Out: Dan Rosenfield
In: Steve Barclay MP
Mr Rosenfield had faced criticism for a perceived lack of control and discipline in Number 10.
Sue Gray’s report into Partygate last week was highly critical of the alcohol-fuelled culture, saying: ‘The excessive consumption of alcohol is not appropriate in a professional workplace at any time.
‘Steps must be taken to ensure that every Government Department has a clear and robust policy in place covering the consumption of alcohol in the workplace.
Mr Rosenfield faced criticism for a perceived lack of control and discipline in Number 10. But his replacement by former Brexit minister Steve Barclay has raised eyebrows
No10 made clear afterwards that no officials have been sacked, although a notorious wine fridge is apparently being removed from the building and restrictions could be imposed on drinking at desks.
But Mr Rosenfield’s replacement with former Brexit minister Steve Barclay has raised eyebrows.
He is close to Chancellor Rishi Sunak, having previously been his deputy at the Treasury.
There are also questions about how he juggled his many responsibilities. Mr Barclay is already Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Cabinet Office Minister and the MP for North East Cambridgeshire.
Yesterday, Nick Timothy, who acted as joint chief of staff to Theresa May during her first year in Downing Street, said it was ‘surely not possible to be chief of staff while serving elsewhere as a minister’.
He said the ‘sheer workload’ would be a ‘problem’, adding: ‘It’s a recipe for chaos, when these changes were supposed to bring order.’
Lord Barwell, who took over as Mrs May’s chief of staff following the 2017 general election, said Mr Barclay would have to find ‘a different way’ to do the job than he did ‘because he’s combining it with being a Government minister and an MP at the same time’.
HEAD OF NO10 POLICY UNIT
Out: Munira Mirza
In: Andrew Griffiths MP
The only unscripted departure last week was that of policy chief Munira Mirza.
The 44-year-old had worked with the PM for 14 years, including when he was mayor of London, quit over an attack on Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer
Under pressure at the despatch box over Sue Gray’s Partygate report on Monday the PM claimed the Labour leader had ‘used his time prosecuting journalists and failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile‘ while running the Crown Prosecution Service.
Quitting on Thursday, Mirza said she had urged him to fully apologise for using a ‘scurrilous’ trope that originated on far right websites but he had refused.
Her swift departure was followed by an almost as swift replacement.
Mirza worked with the PM for 14 years, including when he was mayor of London. Andrew Griffiths is a former Sky executive who loaned Johnson his £9.5m Westminster home to plot his leadership bid in 2019.
Andrew Griffiths is a former Sky executive who was only elected to Parliament in 2019, but he was already Mr Johnson’s political private secretary. His links to the PM predate his election however.
When Mr Johnson and his team were plotting his leadership buid in early 2019 they did so from Griffiths’ £9.5million Westminster townhouse a stone’s throw from the Commons.
They used the Grade II-listed, five-storey home as a campaign headquarters and the PM has been quick to repay the favour.
Mr Griffith, who was Sky’s chief financial and chief operating officer, is believed to have gifted Johnson the use of his property.
Writing about his plans for the policy chief job in Conservative Home today, Mr Griffith said he wants to ‘return rapidly to the point when we can cut taxes to let everyone keep more of their own money’.
He also said he wants to boost backbenchers’ involvement in matters of policy.
But he said ‘decisions are usually taken best close to where their impact is felt’, and ‘high-performing departments should expect a light touch approach, freeing up bandwidth for deeper interventions elsewhere’.
Mr Griffith said his ‘top priorities’ involve tackling the NHS backlog, reducing the cost of living and controlling the country’s borders, as well as getting the Tories back to a place where they can cut taxes.
‘You would not know it from the media headlines, but families want to hear about our plans to grow employment, tackle the NHS backlog, control our borders, make their streets safer, bring down the cost of living and return rapidly to the point when we can cut taxes to let everyone keep more of their own money – all policies that are rooted in strong Conservative values,’ he wrote.
‘As the Prime Minister’s director of policy, these are my top priorities together with delivering the tangible opportunities from Brexit that will allow our economy to be more competitive and the reform of government to deliver better public services.
‘Whilst the policy unit’s remit is to advise the Prime Minister across the widest breadth of government policy, we will be unafraid to ruthlessly focus on the key issues. It is ultimately outputs that matter.’
He also reiterated the PM’s plans to re-establish backbench policy committees.
‘A large majority is a poor substitute for proper engagement between ministers, No 10 and backbench colleagues who in many cases possess decades of relevant experience,’ he wrote.
‘The 1922 backbench policy committees – one covering each major Government department – will form just one part of changes in how a sleeker No 10 operation engages with Members of Parliament.
‘Ministers, too, will notice a difference. In today’s complex, competitive and dynamic environment it’s a fallacy to control everything too tightly from the centre.
‘Decisions are usually taken best close to where their impact is felt, and high-performing departments should expect a light touch approach, freeing up bandwidth for deeper interventions elsewhere.’
CHIEF WHIP
In: TBC
Out: Mark Spencer
Tory chief whip Mark Spencer is not expected to last the week as the PM plots a small reshuffle.
The Sherwood MP has been the focus of ministerial ire after he failed to identify or quell a series of rebellions against the PM, including over Covid regulations and the plot to keep Owen Paterson in the Commons after he was caught lobbying.
He has also been accused of – and denied – blackmailing Mps with the loss of funding for their constituencies if they rebelled.
The Sherwood MP has been the focus of ministerial ire after he failed to identify or quell a series of rebellions against the PM, including over Covid regulations and the plot to keep Owen Paterson in the Commons after he was caught lobbying.
Those involved in the so-called Pork Pie Putsch – as it took place in the office of Alice Kearns MP for Melton Mowbray, the home of the pork pie – the group claim they have been the victims of political threats.
Party whips are accused of threatening to withdraw funding from their constituencies, while government aides allegedly smeared them by releasing unsubstantiated claims about their drinking habits and personal lives in the press. The claims have been denied by No 10.
DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS
Out: Jack Doyle
In: Guto Harri
Jack Doyle, the No10 director of communications, stepped down after he too was linked to some of the Downing Street lockdown parties.
The announcement came shortly after Mirza’s with the former journalist telling staff: ‘It was always my intention to do two years. Recent weeks have taken a terrible toll on my family life.’
Into his place, Guto Hari was announced at the weekend. He’s a former BBC journalist who worked in communications for Mr Johnson when he was mayor of London.
Jack Doyle, the No10 director of communications, stepped down after he too was linked to some of the Downing Street lockdown parties. Into his place, Guto Hari was announced at the weekend.
But his appointment may also raise some eyebrows at a time when the Government is in the middle of a culture war.
Last summer, when he was a GB News presenter, Mr Harri was suspended and then left the channel after he was publicly reprimanded by the channel’s ‘anti-woke’ bosses for taking the knee live on television in protest at the racist abuse aimed at black England football stars.
He and his co-host Mercy Muroki spoke about the vile abuse Three Lions stars Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka had received online, during which Mr Harri admitted he ‘gets’ why footballers take the knee before each game.
Mr Harri then proceeded to take the knee himself on air, sparking a viewer boycott and a public telling-off by GB News. In a statement, the channel said it was ‘unacceptable’ for any presenter to take the knee and accused Mr Harri of breaking its Editorial Charter.
Supporters of the PM have previously claimed anyone who takes a knee, including police officers and sports stars, risks being seen to endorse some of the Left-wing ideas promoted by Black Lives Matter as well as opposing racism.
His role as a lobbyist for Huawei has also raised questions. He previously worked for Hawthorn Advisers and was involved in efforts to avoid a ban on the Chinese firm being involved in the UK’s 5G network, the Sun reported.
PRINCIPAL PRIVATE SECRETARY
Out: Martin Reynolds
In: TBC
Martin Reynolds’ time in No10 was effectively over once it was revealed he invited Downing Street staff to ‘socially distanced drinks’ when England was subject to strict Covid rules.
Mr Reynolds, the Prime Minister’s principal private secretary, invited more than 100 Downing Street staff to an event in the Number 10 garden on May 20, 2020.
An email obtained by ITV News showed he had invited staff to ‘make the most of the lovely weather’ and to ‘bring your own booze’.
Mr Reynolds, the Prime Minister’s principal private secretary, invited more than 100 Downing Street staff to an event in the Number 10 garden on May 20, 2020.
Messages shown to the BBC revealed that some Number 10 employees were shocked by the invite.
One staff member who received the email wrote a message to another official at the time in which they said ‘is this for real?’.
Another similar message, seen by the BBC, stated: ‘Um. Why is Martin encouraging a mass gathering in the garden?’
However, questions remain over whether Mr Reynolds would have sent the message under his own authority and whether Mr Johnson was involved.
Campaigners had called for his sacking, with the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group saying last month ‘it’s blindingly obvious that Martin Reynolds has to go’.
But Downing Street initially defended him, saying Mr Johnson has ‘full confidence’ in Mr Reynolds and ‘Martin continues in his role’.
He has yet to be replaced.
PERMANENT SECRTARY, OFFICE OF THE PRIME MINISTER
Out: New role
In: Dame Emily Lawson
Dame Emily, who currently runs NHS England’s vaccination programme, was seconded to Downing Street’s delivery unit – a team in charge of ensuring the Government delivers on its policies – in April last year before returning to the health service in October.
The Times reported No 10 was hoping to announce her return as the new permanent secretary this week.
Dr Lawson impressed with the ‘brilliant’ way that she masterminded the rollout of mass vaccinations.
Dr Lawson impressed with the ‘brilliant’ way that she masterminded the rollout of mass vaccinations.
The medic, who is said to enjoy kickboxing, has won a reputation as one of the NHS’s most impressive bosses.
From November last year to this August, she led a small team of experts based in offices in Admiralty House – a grand 18th Century building on Whitehall – who oversaw NHS England’s ‘vaccine deployment programme’.
A huge network of vaccination centres and a simple booking system meant the UK outstripped EU countries, with more than a million jab appointments booked each day in June.
She worked at management consultancy firm McKinsey and the supermarket giant Morrisons, where she was human resources director, before becoming a senior NHS boss in 2017.
Earlier in the pandemic, as the NHS’s chief commercial officer, she was tasked with solving the health service’s dire shortage of PPE equipment.
Dr Lawson’s mother Annette, 85, is a campaigner for women’s rights, while her brother Ralph, 52, is an acclaimed music producer and DJ.