Shropshire Star

Boris Johnson: 'I won't stand to be Prime Minister'

Boris Johnson today sensationally ruled himself out of a bid for the Tory leadership.

Published

The battle for the Conservative leadership has been dramatically transformed after Mr Johnson announced that he would not stand in the race to succeed David Cameron.

The former London mayor's decision not to join the battle leaves Home Secretary Theresa May as hot favourite to be the next Prime Minister.

It came after the shock announcement by fellow Brexit campaigner Michael Gove - who had widely been expected to be Mr Johnson's running mate - that he was putting himself forward for the leadership.

In a dramatic press conference just moments before the deadline for nominations passed, Mr Johnson said that the next Tory leader would have to unify his party and ensure that Britain stood tall in the world.

And he said: "Having consulted colleagues and in view of the circumstances in Parliament, I have concluded that person cannot be me."

Wrekin MP Mark Pritchard this afternoon declared his support for Theresa May.

He said: ""At this time of political change for our country we need a leader of the party and a Prime Minister who is dependable, reliable, and solid, and someone who can unite the country and party while battling for the best of Britain, as well as setting out a vision for the whole country. That is why I am supporting Theresa May."

He added that Mrs May "is known as a tough, but listening, negotiator in Brussels, which is what the country needs."

Mr Pritchard tweeted:

Shrewsbury & Atcham MP Daniel Kawczynski published a letter of support for Michael Gove.

He said: "We have been through one of the most divisive referendum campaigns in living memory and it is vital that we have a leader who will be able to perform three key priorities:

"1. Negotiate effectively with our European friends and allies an equitable mutually respectful and mutually advantageous relationship based on the best possible trading parameters, whilst ensuring the UK takes back control of our immigration policy.

"2. We need an individual with the experience in government of running a major government department working effectively with a parliamentary party, civil servants and outside organisation. Somebody who can attempt to heal the wounds this polarising argument has thrown up.

"3. We need somebody who understands Scotland and the Scottish people and who will be effective in convincing Scotland to vote to remain in the eventually of a possible further independence referendum instigated by the SNP.

"I have given considerable thought on which individual would be best suited to fulfill these three key criteria and I will be discussing my thoughts with local party members and the wider electorate on my return to Shrewsbury this evening. However I believe the best candidate is Michael Gove and that is why I will be backing his campaign."

Mr Kawczynski tweeted his letter:

Supporting image.

Telford MP Lucy Allan is supporting Theresa May.

She said: "We are fortunate to have an excellent selection of candidates to choose from for our next leader.

"I will be supporting Theresa May in the leadership contest. In my opinion she is the candidate most able to offer the stability and strong leadership that the UK needs.

"As someone who has been at the heart of government for the past six years, and in one of the toughest roles, Theresa has demonstrated the attributes needed to be Prime Minister.

"Negotiating our exit from the EU will be the biggest task facing the next Prime Minister and Theresa is the candidate that I feel will be able to secure the best deal possible for the UK. In addition to this, her pledge to create a 'Brexit' department with a cabinet level minister demonstrates her commitment to achieving this."

Montgomeryshire MP Glyn Davies said: ""It is impossible at this stage to know who I am going to back. It is like opening a box of Quality Street, you do not know what to pick out.

"What makes it more difficult is the policies the candidates are offering are the same. There is no philosophical difference.

"The one thing I wanted all along is that Boris Johnson should have been on the list."

He added: "The last thing we wanted it to look like is some establishment stitch-up where the perceived popular choice is kept off the ballot. I am not saying I would have voted for him but I feel from the party membership position that choice should have been there."

Other reactions on Twitter included:

Mr Johnson's withdrawal from the fight before battle had been joined came after Justice Secretary Mr Gove - who campaigned alongside Mr Johnson for Leave in the EU referendum - said the former London mayor "cannot provide the leadership or build the team for the task ahead".

In a bombshell announcement released just hours before Mr Johnson was due to formally launch his leadership bid, Mr Gove said he had "reluctantly" concluded that he could not support the ex-London mayor.

"I have repeatedly said that I do not want to be prime minister. That has always been my view. But events since last Thursday have weighed heavily with me," he said.

"I respect and admire all the candidates running for the leadership. In particular, I wanted to help build a team behind Boris Johnson so that a politician who argued for leaving the European Union could lead us to a better future.

"But I have come, reluctantly, to the conclusion that Boris cannot provide the leadership or build the team for the task ahead. I have, therefore, decided to put my name forward for the leadership."

Mr Johnson made supporters and journalists wait until the end of his speech before revealing his intentions, just moments before the official announcement from the Tories 1922 Committee that there would be five candidates in the contest - Mr Gove, Mrs May, Work and Pensions Secretary Stephen Crabb, former defence secretary Liam Fox and pro-Brexit energy minister Andrea Leadsom.

Britain had a chance "to think globally again, to lift our eyes to the horizon, to bring our uniquely British voice and values, powerful, humane, progressive, to the great global forums without being elbowed aside by a supranational body" and the agenda for the next PM would be to "seize this chance and make this our moment to stand tall in the world", said Mr Johnson.

But he added: "I must tell you, my friends, you who have waited faithfully for the punchline of this speech, that having consulted colleagues, and in view of the circumstances in Parliament, I have concluded that person cannot be me.

"My role will be to give every possible support to the next Conservative administration, make sure we properly fulfil the mandate of the people that was delivered at the referendum and to champion the agenda I believe in."

Meanwhile, Mrs May launched her bid for Number 10 with a message that the country needed "strong leadership" at a time of economic and political uncertainty and - in a clear swipe at Mr Johnson - warned that politics was not a "game". Contrasting herself with those who enter politics out of "ideological fervour" or "ambition or glory", she said she was a "public service" politician who was not "showy" but could "get the job done".

"If you are from an ordinary working class family, life is just much harder than many people in politics realise," she said.

"Frankly, not everybody in Westminster understands what it's like to live like this and some need to be told that it isn't a game. It's a serious business that has real consequences for people's lives."

Mrs May - who was a low-key supporter of Remain during the referendum - made clear she will not attempt to back away from last week's vote to leave the EU, saying: "Brexit means Brexit."

In a further olive branch to Leave supporters, she said she would create a new Government department, headed by a Cabinet-level minister who had campaigned for Leave, to oversee the UK's departure from the EU.

Signs of the tensions that had developed between Mr Johnson and Mr Gove were exposed when an email from the Justice Secretary's wife was accidentally sent to the wrong person.

In it, journalist Sarah Vine warned her husband that he must secure a specific guarantee about his future before making any deal with the former London mayor and should "not concede any ground".

In a further fracturing of the Vote Leave campaign, Mrs Leadsom announced she was making her own bid for the leadership while the Leader of the Commons Chris Grayling has come out for Mrs May.

Cabinet ministers Nicky Morgan and Jeremy Hunt both ruled out leadership bids, with Mrs Morgan backing Mr Gove and Mr Hunt backing Mrs May.

Justice Minister Dominic Raab, a Gove ally who backed the joint ticket and who penned a newspaper article which appeared this morning backing Mr Johnson as PM, said the ex-London mayor's "cavalier" attitude had scuppered the plan.

The party needed a "unity figure who can bring people together and ultimately put a team together", he told Sky News.

"Until the 11th hour Michael Gove was committed to doing that with Boris. It hasn't happened and some of the reassurances that we had had about turning a dream ticket into a dream team didn't materialise."