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Nadine Dorries claims ‘coup’ brought down Boris Johnson

Culture secretary has been staunch supporter of outgoing prime minister

Sophie Wingate
Thursday 14 July 2022 10:20 BST
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Nadine Dorries and Jacob Rees-Mogg endorse Liz Truss for prime minister

Nadine Dorries has accused fellow Tory MPs of staging a “coup” against Boris Johnson.

The culture secretary has been one of the outgoing prime minister’s most ardent supporters, sticking by him even as support for his leadership collapsed at Westminster.

Ms Dorries told BBC Panorama: “I was quite stunned that there were people who thought that removing the prime minister who won the biggest majority that we’ve had since Margaret Thatcher in less than three years.

“Just the the anti-democratic nature of what they’re doing alone was enough to alarm me.

“And for me it was a coup”.

Ms Dorries made the same claim on Monday, when she also criticised those who moved against Mr Johnson.

“14 million people voted for the prime minister and a group of MPs, ministers, the chancellor, his sitting chancellor, via what is effectively a coup, removed him,” she told GB News.

Ms Dorries has thrown her weight behind foreign secretary Liz Truss in the Tory leadership contest that will select Mr Johnson’s successor at No 10.

She has led an attack on Ms Truss’ rival, Rishi Sunak, whose resignation as chancellor last week is seen by Johnson allies as key in ending the prime minister’s grip on No 10.

Ms Dorries accused Mr Sunak’s campaign team of using the “dark arts” following claims they tried to “syphon off” votes to ensure Jeremy Hunt cleared the threshold to enter the contest because they believed Mr Sunak would beat him in a run-off vote of party members.

Former health secretary Sajid Javid

Sajid Javid, whose resignation as health secretary came within minutes of Mr Sunak’s, triggering a mass ministerial exodus that led to Mr Johnson admitting his time was up, denied the move was co-ordinated.

Mr Javid told Panorama: “We hadn’t had any single discussion about it whatsoever. I had a feeling that other people would follow.”

Conservative former leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith, who is backing Ms Truss in the race, said she should not ask Mr Johnson to serve in her cabinet if she wins.

“He has no desire to put a straitjacket around himself, having to run in accordance with other people’s wishes,” he told LBC radio.

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