Boris Johnson has so far had four cabinet ministers resign and sacked one – in the form of Michael Gove. Now, one minister has come out publicly to say they will run to be a successor should there be a leadership contest. Step forward Suella Braverman.
On Wednesday evening, the Attorney General gave an interview to ITV’s Robert Peston in which she voiced her unhappiness over the Prime Minister’s behaviour in recent days. Braverman – who until now was viewed as a staunch Johnson loyalist – said there was an overwhelming sense of despair among MPs so ‘the time has come for the Prime Minister to step down’. Given she is one of many to say that, it wasn’t necessarily headline news. It’s also notable that she hasn’t actually resigned.
But what came after was striking, When asked by Peston whether she would consider running for leader, Braverman said:
‘Yes. If there is a leadership contest, I will put my name into the ring. I love this country. My parents came here with absolutely nothing and it was Britain that gave them hope, security and opportunity and afforded me incredible opportunities in education and my career. I owe a debt of gratitude to this country and to serve as prime minister would be the greatest honour so yes I will try.’
Braverman isn’t currently viewed as a frontrunner. In fact, the Brexiteer’s name has only really come up in conversations about the leadership race in the last few days. However, her candidacy points to three things.
Already a subscriber? Log in
Comments
Don't miss out
Join the conversation with other Spectator readers. Subscribe to leave a comment.
UNLOCK ACCESSAlready a subscriber? Log in