Johnson to cabinet: shape up or I’ll sack you within weeks
Boris Johnson is to tell cabinet ministers that they
must focus all their energy on developing policies for post-Brexit Britain – or
face the sack in a wide-ranging cabinet reshuffle within weeks.
In an extraordinary move, Johnson will tell his most
senior ministers that they must concentrate on “delivery” and hard work that
will help “level up” the country, rather than “touring TV studios” and trying
to raise their personal profiles in the media.
The decision by the prime minister to exert his
personal authority is part of a clear attempt, agreed with his chief adviser,
Dominic Cummings, to establish control from No 10, and represents a break with
tradition.
Normally, No 10 refuses to comment on pending
reshuffles. This time, however, it has, in effect, put ministers on probation,
issuing instructions about how they can best position themselves if they are to
avoid the axe.
Government sources revealed on Saturday night that
the head of the No 10 policy unit, Munira Mirza, would soon be writing to all
cabinet ministers to tell them that delivering on the prime minister’s agenda
would be the “key demand” of No 10. Downing Street officials have confirmed
that the reshuffle will take place before the February parliamentary recess.
Sources said Johnson did not want ministers
arranging media appearances or lunches with journalists. One senior government
insider explained: “It is very frustrating when they deal with their own
paranoia by deciding they must go on this or that TV show, when the PM wants
them just to do the job.”
A No 10 source said: “In his time in office the
prime minister has been consistently clear that this government will reward
hard work. We have been impressed by members of the government and junior
ministers who have quietly got on with driving real change within their
departments and delivering on the PM’s priority to level up our country.”
Cummings has signalled his intention to
revolutionise the workings of Whitehall by bringing more independent advisers
into the heart of government. The latest cracking of the whip in the direction
of the cabinet suggests his ambitions extend far further.
The warning to cabinet ministers come as a new
Opinium poll for the Observer suggests Johnson is impressing many voters who
doubted his ability in the run-up to the election. The poll shows 42% of voters
believe he is doing a better job as prime minister than expected, while 39% say
their opinion of him has become more positive since the election. Only 18% of
voters think Labour can win the next general election.
Johnson has decided to take the lead in attempts to
focus on post-Brexit policies by cutting back on his own international travel.
He has told his officials to strip back his overseas engagements so he can take
personal charge of “levelling up” the country after the UK leaves the EU on 31
January. Johnson will make a keynote speech in early February on his plans for
the country post-Brexit. He wants trade talks with the US to begin at the same
time as negotiations on a future relationship with the EU, sources say.
Even before Johnson’s ultimatum to his cabinet,
unity was strengthened by ministers’ desire to keep their posts in next month’s
reshuffle. In a sign of Johnson’s power after his decisive election victory,
tensions with both chancellor Sajid Javid and Northern Ireland secretary Julian
Smith are said to have dissipated, with Downing Street now in a commanding
position.
However, the business world reacted warily to
Javid’s assertion on Saturday that Britain would be diverging from European
Union rules once Britain was completely outside the bloc from the start of next
year. His remarks, seen as the opening position in a difficult negotiation with
Brussels over a future trade deal, immediately provoked warnings of price rises
and a hit to key business sectors.
Tim Rycroft, at the Food and Drink Federation,
warned: “Food and drink manufacturers will be deeply concerned by the
chancellor’s suggestion that there will not be regulatory alignment with the EU
post-Brexit. This represents the death knell for frictionless trade. It will
mean businesses will have to adjust to costly new checks, processes and
procedures that will act as a barrier to frictionless trade with the EU and may
well result in price rises.”
Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders, warned against “additional requirements that would
add billions to the cost of development”.
He added: “It is important that we have early sight
of the details of the government’s ambitions so we can evaluate any impact on
our competitiveness and the future of volume manufacturing in the UK.”