A second Harrogate district MP has declared his support for Rishi Sunak in the race to become the next Prime Minister.
Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon, has publicly backed the former Chancellor of the Exchequer for the first time.
In a post on Twitter today, he said:
“Rishi has a proper plan to get us through the tough times ahead. He is committed to rebuilding the economy and delivering for our area.
“Only Rishi can unite our country and defeat Labour and he will have my full support in doing so.”
— Julian Smith MP (@JulianSmithUK) July 21, 2022
Andrew Jones, MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, has already given his support to Rishi Sunak.
Selby and Ainsty’s Nigel Adams has yet to declare his allegiance. He has been a close ally of Boris Johnson, having publicly supported the outgoing PM on several occasions in recent months.
It has been reported that Mr Adams could be handed a peerage following Mr Johnson’s departure, which would then trigger a by-election in his constituency.
Mr Sunak will compete with Liz Truss to be elected leader of the Conservative party in September, after its members cast their votes.
The pair will take part in hustings events around the country over the next few weeks.
Read more:
- Harrogate district MP Nigel Adams to step down at next election
- Andrew Jones MP: ‘I’m backing Rishi Sunak’
Nigel Adams: By-election could be called amid peerage reports
People in parts of the Harrogate district could be set for a by-election amid reports that MP Nigel Adams is in line for a peerage.
According to The Observer, Mr Johnson is planning to award peerages to both Mr Adams and culture secretary Nadine Dorries. Both are regarded as key allies.
The awarding of a peerage would trigger a by-election, which could prove an early test for Mr Johnson’s successor.
Mr Adams, whose Selby and Ainsty constituency includes Spofforth, Follifoot, Huby and Weeton, is currently a minister without portfolio in the Cabinet Office.
Read more:
- Harrogate district MP Nigel Adams to step down at next election
- Nigel Adams MP’s £33,000 donation from former Russian businessman back in spotlight
Mr Adams has already announced he will be standing down at the next general election, which is due to take place in 2024.
He was first elected in 2010 and has defended the seat in three subsequent elections.
He currently holds the Selby and Ainsty seat with a majority of 20,137.
The Stray Ferret has approached Mr Adams for comment.
Andrew Jones MP: ‘I’m backing Rishi Sunak’Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has declared his support for Rishi Sunak in the Conservative leadership contest.
Former Chancellor Mr Sunak is regarded as the front runner of eight candidates vying to become party leader and the next Prime Minister.
Mr Jones said he supported the Richmond MP even though he, along with Prime Minister Boris Johnson, had received a fine for breaching covid regulations.
Mr Jones previously said of Mr Johnson that “lawbreakers can’t be lawbreakers” but he said Mr Sunak’s situation was different:
“For most people that was a surprise as he turned up at Number 10 for a meeting and walked into the Cabinet room as the Prime Minister was being presented with a cake. Once he received the fine he paid it.
“There was no dissembling, no denial and no appeal even though many thought it was harsh. He accepted the ruling. I think people understand the difference between that and the many months of changing claims that preceded the Prime Minister’s fine.”
Writing on his Community News website, Mr Jones added:
“We face challenging times so we need a Prime Minister who is strong and with proven economic ability and business credibility.
“In the field of foreign affairs we need someone already known and respected on the international stage to keep the pressure on Russia to quit Ukraine.
“The country needs someone who is consistent and transparent to reinvigorate trust in politics.
Read more:
- Andrew Jones MP calls on Boris Johnson to resign
- Andrew Jones MP backs bid for levelling up cash to fund HCC redevelopment
Mr Sunak’s rivals have pledged tax cuts but he has warned against “comforting fairytales” and promised fiscal prudence instead.
Mr Jones’ comments do not mention tax cuts but address inflation at length.
“The new Prime Minister needs to look at those structural imbalances in our economy that make us susceptible to inflation.
“That means addressing our dependence on fossil fuels and boosting the productivity and capacity of the economy.
“While addressing these long-term structural problems he or she needs to protect those most affected by rapidly rising prices. This may be through the benefits system, through increasing the living wage, through education in how to lower personal and household costs or through a variety of other means.”
Conservative MPs will vote in a secret leadership ballot today. Candidates who fail to get 30 votes will be eliminated. A new leader will be decided on September 5.
Julian Smith, Skipton and Ripon MP, and Nigel Adams, Selby and Ainsty MP, whose constituencies both include parts of the Harrogate district, have yet to publicly say who they support.
Strayside Sunday: Thank God he’s gone. Now who’s for the top job?
Strayside Sunday is our political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
So, he’s gone. To coin a phrase “thems the breaks.” What a remarkable week it’s been in our national life. The man who delivered an 80-seat majority for the Conservative Party less than three years ago, the man who “got Brexit done” and the man who led the country (many, including me, say successfully) through the pandemic and vaccination rollout was dragged, kicking and screaming, from Downing Street. In my piece following the recent vote of confidence which Boris Johnson won I concluded that we were probably stuck with him for another year. I could not have been more wrong. A woeful Number 10 mishandling of the ‘Pincher by name, Pincher by nature’ affair brought the Prime Minister low – in brief, more lies and dissembling from the boss and his team about what was known of the sex pest’s historic misdemeanours before he was appointed Deputy Chief Whip.
In the end the Prime Minister lost the regard and trust of a staggering number of his ministers (over 50 of whom resigned within 48 hours) and he had to go. I’m glad. Boris Johnson was doing lasting damage to government, infusing it with his own Walter Mitty-like lack of integrity, lack of grip and inattention to detail. In the end he was indeed unfit for office. His colleagues knew it and finally grew the pair required to commit regicide. Fitting for the man-child who, as a boy, proclaimed he wanted to become World King.
The keen-eyed amongst you will have spotted Nigel Adams, MP for Selby and Ainsty, among those in Downing Street, supporting Prime Minister Boris Johnson as he gave his “resignation” speech from the government lectern. Mr Adams has been a staunch supporter of BoJo throughout his tenure, serving latterly as a Cabinet Office Minister. At one point Mr Adams reached across to the PM’s wife Carrie, offering his hand in sympathy. Having already announced his intention to stand down at the next election, Adams will thus be spared the verdict of the electorate on the wisdom of his choice in political friends. That verdict is likely to be damning indeed.
Ripon MP Julian Smith (sitting on a majority better weighed than counted) was, on the other hand, in no way supportive of the Johnsons. In an interview on the Today programme on Wednesday Mr Smith said the Prime Minister had suffered a “catastrophic loss of confidence” among Tory MPs, that his behaviour was Trumpian and, by refusing to step down, that he was causing a “constitutional crisis.” Smith, a former Northern Ireland Secretary, will no doubt be hopeful of renewed ministerial preferment under the next leader, whoever that may be…
Since the Brexit referendum British politics has seen one of the most turbulent periods in modern political life. Boris Johnson is now the third leader despatched by the Tory party in six years. Notwithstanding the poison in the chalice, at time of writing there seem to be no shortage of contenders-manque willing to vie for the crown.
It is often said that those who wield the dagger don’t inherit. If that’s true then neither Sajid Javid nor Rishi Sunak will win the leadership, even though arguably they both acted with principle in leading this week’s tidal waves of resignations from the Johnson government. Both are serious minded and would represent a significant upgrade on their predecessor. Other contenders have less to recommend them. Liz Truss is mad as a March Hare and thinks herself a latter-day Mrs Thatcher. Nadhim Zahawi still looks like a decent bet, although his contortions this week in accepting the position of Chancellor from Johnson one day, going on the media rounds to support the PM the next morning, before telling him to resign the following evening made Houdini look like a cheap carnival act.
The googly eyed Brexiteer Steve Baker was one of the first to declare (please God no; I don’t want government as yet another sinister “research group”), along with Attorney-General Suella Braverman (who’s that??). Grant Shapps has declared his intention, although he might well be too tarred by the Johnson brush for comfort – no one has been on the airwaves more in the past year defending the increasingly indefensible. Jeremy Hunt, who came second last time around will no doubt be in the running. Another serious person who should warrant serious consideration. Penny Mordaunt and Tom Tugendhat round out the field. Both are eminently presentable, full of personality and would represent a generational fresh start that might well benefit the Conservatives come the next election. I want Rishi Sunak.
One man who will most certainly not be standing for the leadership is Harrogate’s own Andrew Jones MP. Having finally and belatedly come out against Boris Johnson he popped up again this week to support a Harrogate Borough Council bid for levelling up cash to fund the proposed redevelopment of the town’s white elephant Convention Centre. The council is understood to have bid for £20m from the government’s (no longer Boris Johnson’s) Levelling Up Fund. This would certainly take a useful bite out of the reported redevelopment budget of a staggering £47m, the costs for which will otherwise fall squarely on local taxpayers. Whether the project would, as Mr Jones says, “help provide a platform for Yorkshire and the Humber businesses domestically and for export, help to drive inward investment and support extensive employment opportunities” is open to conjecture. That Harrogate and surrounds is the type of place for which levelling up is designed, is not. This is a relatively wealthy place, so one admires Mr Jones’ chutzpah in making a public claim on a fund designed to address national inequalities. With the Tories trailing in the polls and the Liberal Democrats resurgent locally it might not be a coincidence that our local MP has found his campaigning voice. Like his Conservative colleagues in government, better late than never.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
Read More:
- Strayside Sunday: we have zombie leadership locally and nationally
- Andrew Jones MP backs bid for levelling up cash to fund HCC redevelopment
- Ripon MP: Prime Minister causing ‘constitutional crisis’ by refusing to resign
Ripon MP: Prime Minister causing ‘constitutional crisis’ by refusing to resign
Boris Johnson is causing a constitutional crisis and acting “Trumpian” by not resigning, says Conservative Ripon MP Julian Smith.
Mr Smith heavily criticised the Prime Minister in an interview with BBC Radios 4’s Today programme and said Mr Johnson had suffered a “catastrophic loss of confidence” among Tory MPs.
The comments come as Mr Johnson faced calls from his own MPs and some members of his cabinet to resign last night.
Yesterday, a record 40 ministers and aides quit the government. Brandon Lewis, Northern Ireland secretary, becoming the latest to step down this morning.
The Prime Minister has said he has a mandate from voters to continue.
But Mr Smith said:
“It’s a preposterous argument, the British voters voted for the Conservative party.
“At the time of that election, Boris Johnson was the leader. But that was not a personal vote, it was a vote for individual candidates across the country.
“The bulk of those MPs who supported him at that election now do not have the confidence in him to remain as Prime Minister.”
Mr Smith joined Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, Andrew Jones, yesterday in calling for the Prime Minister to step down.
Read More:
- Harrogate district MP quizzed on reaction to Tory resignations
- Lib Dems on course to take Harrogate and Knaresborough, says YouGov
- Andrew Jones MP calls on Boris Johnson to resign
However, Nigel Adams, a Johnson ally and MP for Selby and Ainsty which includes parts of rural Harrogate, remains in the cabinet and is yet to comment.
This morning, Mr Smith said the country was in a constitutional crisis because Mr Johnson’s refused to leave Downing Street despite having no “confidence from his party”.
He said:
Andrew Jones MP calls on Boris Johnson to resign“I think we are [in a constitutional crisis] because he doesn’t have the confidence of his party. So on what basis is he residing in Number 10?
“Obviously many times before you have had Prime Ministers who may have outstayed their welcome.
“But the key difference is that Boris Johnson, for whatever reason, has had a catastrophic loss of confidence and is still holding out in a Trumpian style seemingly trying to write the next chapter or the first chapter of his memoirs or trying to prepare for the speaker circuit.
“But [he is] actually challenging, extremely worryingly, the system that we have run the country for years.”
Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP, Andrew Jones, has called on Boris Johnson to resign as Prime Minister.
It’s been a day of mass resignations at Westminster with Boris Johnson’s position becoming more precarious by the minute.
This afternoon Andrew Jones MP published a statement on his party’s Community News website calling for Mr Johnson to step down.
Mr Jones has already made his unhappiness with Mr Johnson clear when he voted against him in a confidence vote.
This was before the furore over the former deputy chief whip Chris Pincher.
In his statement Mr Jones said:
“Nothing has happened which has changed my opinion of the Prime Minister’s conduct since the no confidence vote just a few weeks ago when I voted no. In fact the behaviours which put me in that position have continued. This is disappointing as I was willing to give the Prime Minister time to change those behaviours but recent events show that he is unable to do so. Indeed he has quite clearly said that he will not be changing.
“For that reason I think we have come to the end of the road with this Prime Minister. It doesn’t take a genius to read the room. The Prime Minister should do that and move aside for the good of the country and our politics.”
Read More:
- Harrogate district MP quizzed on reaction to Tory resignations
- Lib Dems on course to take Harrogate and Knaresborough, says YouGov
In an update this evening, Conservative MP for Ripon & Skipton Julian Smith has also suggested that the PM should resign.
Andrew Jones MP calls on Prime Minister for rail improvementsThe Prime Minister is absolutely right in what he said just said at the liaison committee, 'all flesh is grass'. He must now take the lead in a responsible transition to ensure stable government for our country.
— Julian Smith MP (@JulianSmithUK) July 6, 2022
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones today urged the Prime Minister to introduce more apprenticeships in the rail industry.
Speaking at Prime Minister’s Question Time, Mr Jones asked Boris Johnson if he would ensure there were apprenticeship schemes in place to help the industry become more efficient and embrace technology.
He called for the government to focus on training engineers and drivers in order to recover services lost during the covid pandemic.
The Conservative MP said:
“For years in Harrogate and Knaresborough we had the Labour no growth Northern rail franchise.
“We have new rolling stock, more and better services. We have though seen some lost as the industry has had to suspend some services while they catch up on driver training lost during the pandemic.
“Strikes just takes us back to the 1970s, so will the Prime Minister’s focus on the future ensure that we have apprenticeship schemes focussing on engineering and driver training to ensure we recover the services lost and an industry that’s focused upon efficiency and embraces technology for the future.”
Read more:
- Harrogate rail campaigner ‘optimistic’ early morning train could be reinstated
- No replacement buses for Harrogate district commuters during strike
- No trains for two days in Harrogate next week as strike action hits
In response, Mr Johnson said:
“We’re doing just that.
“We’re reforming train driver training to make entry into the sector simpler, while continuing of course to make sure we meet vital safety requirements.”
Chris Watt, a Labour Party campaigner in Harrogate and Knaresborough, responded on Twitter by saying that Harrogate was one of the last stations left with old fashioned Pacer trains during Mr Jones’ time as rail minister.
Harrogate district MP calls for end to Tory ‘leadership speculation’Extraordinary #Harrogate #Knaresborough MP @AJonesMP to call for rail improvements #PMQs when he was Rail Minister (3 times) Harrogate line was one of the last in the country left suffering Pacer trains and under his @Conservatives Gov @northernassist have recently cut services!
— Chris Watt (@ChrisWatt4) June 22, 2022
Nigel Adams has called for the Conservative party to “put leadership speculation and distractions behind us” after the Prime Minister survived a confidence vote.
Boris Johnson won last night’s ballot among his own MPs by 211 to 148.
The result means Mr Johnson will remain as leader of the Conservatives and Prime Minister, however the number of his own MPs voting against him has raised questions about his long-term future.
Following the announcement of the result, Mr Adams, who is MP for Selby and Ainsty which includes rural Harrogate, tweeted his support for Mr Johnson.
Mr Adams, who is in the cabinet and a close ally of the Prime Minister, said:
“Tonight, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has won another clear mandate as leader of the Conservative Party.
“Now we can fully focus on delivering on the people’s priorities and put leadership speculation and distractions behind us for good.”
Read more:
- MPs watch: ‘anger’ over partygate and Northern Ireland politics
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
- Andrew Jones MP to vote against Boris Johnson tonight
Among those who voted against Mr Johnson was Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones.
Mr Jones said he made the decision after “hundreds of people” in his constituency wrote to him, with most calling for the Prime Minister to resign.
Tonight, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has won another clear mandate as Leader of the Conservative Party. Now we can fully focus on delivering on the people’s priorities and put leadership speculation and distractions behind us for good.
— Nigel Adams (@nadams) June 6, 2022
Mr Jones said in a statement yesterday:
“There were many harrowing stories in those emails where people couldn’t visit elderly relatives or mourn them at their funerals. These were people following the rules the Prime Minister set and championed.”
Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon, has remained silent on how he voted.
The result means that the Prime Minister cannot face another confidence vote for 12 months.
But it has been suggested that the 1922 committee of backbench Tory MPs may change the rules to allow for a vote sooner.
Harrogate district MPs to vote on Prime Minister’s futureConservative MPs in the Harrogate district will vote on Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s future this evening after a confidence vote was triggered.
Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench MPs, confirmed this morning that a ballot will be held at 6pm today.
The move comes as the threshold of 15% of the parliamentary Conservative party seeking a vote of confidence in Mr Johnson was met.
It means Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith, and Nigel Adams in Selby and Ainsty, which includes south and east rural parts of the Harrogate district, will all have a say in the Prime Minister’s future.
Should Mr Johnson lose the vote, he will have to stand down as Prime Minister.
The ballot comes as 54 Tory MPs have submitted letters of no confidence in the wake of partygate and revelations that lockdown parties were held at 10 Downing Street.
What have the Harrogate district MPs said?
Mr Jones was named by the Daily Mail last week as one of the Conservative rebels.
Mr Jones has not publicly called for the Prime Minister to resign and has not revealed whether he submitted a letter to the 1922 committee.
Read more:
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
- Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones MP named as Tory ‘rebel’
In a letter to a constituent who had asked about the Sue Gray report, he said he felt “anger” over partygate.
Meanwhile, Mr Adams has said previously that it was time for Mr Johnson to “get on with the job” following the publication of the report.
A member of the Prime Minister’s cabinet and a key ally, he said last month:
“The Prime Minister welcomes Sue Gray’s report and has apologised again.
“He now needs to get on with the job, levelling up the country, tackling global challenges including the cost of living and Ukraine crisis and delivering for the country and for the people who put their faith in him in 2019.”
Mr Smith has yet to speak publicly on Mr Johnson’s future.
North Yorks council leader says MPs should decide PM’s fateThe future of Prime Minister Boris Johnson following the partygate saga is for Conservative MPs to decide, says North Yorkshire County Council’s leader.
The Guardian reported yesterday that Cllr Les would support a leadership election in the party.
However, speaking to the Stray Ferret today he claimed he was misquoted and any leadership election within the party was a matter for MPs. He said:
“I said it was disappointing results and I am sure that [partygate] was a factor.”
Read more:
- Resign and higher fines: Harrogate district bereaved families react to PM’s lockdown party fine
- Harrogate district MP: ‘Time for Boris to get on with the job’
- Andrew Jones MP tells constituent he feels ‘anger’ over partygate
When asked if he supported Mr Johnson, Cllr Les reiterated that the Prime Minister’s future was for “the parliamentary party to decide”.
His comments follow the publication of the Sue Gray report, which found that many of the parties in Downing Street “should not have been allowed to happen”.
Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative MP, Andrew Jones, told a constituent in a letter that he felt “anger” over the report.
But Mr Jones, who said in January that “lawmakers can’t be lawbreakers”, did not say whether he had submitted a letter of no confidence in Mr Johnson.
The BBC reported this morning that 27 Tory MPs have publicly urged the Prime Minister to resign.
Letters of no confidence have been submitted to Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench Conservative MPs, but the precise number is unknown.
Former Attorney General Jeremy Wright became the latest senior Conservative to call for Mr Johnson to step down, saying the lockdown parties at Downing Street had done “lasting damage” to the party.