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Bristol Post
Bristol Post
World
Beth Cruse

'Prepare for general election next year' - No 10 staff issued warning by senior Boris Johnson aide

Staff at No 10 have reportedly been told to prepare for a general election as soon as next year. Boris Johnson's deputy chief of staff David Canzini said the "clock is ticking," and while May 2024 is still the most likely date, an election could come as early as next autumn, according to remarks reported in the Times.

Mr Canzini is said to have made the comments during a briefing at No 10 last Friday. He said the PM was "not out of the woods" on Partygate, despite Jacob Rees-Mogg branding the scandal "fluff."

According to The Times, Mr Canzini presented staff with a slide showing the government’s five priorities, of which Brexit was at the top of the list. “If you don’t think that’s a priority you shouldn’t be here,” Canzini is reported to have said.

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As the Mirror reports, speaking at Tory Spring Conference in Blackpool, Mr Rees-Mogg said the Ukraine crisis has provided an opportunity for the Tories to ‘get away’ from Partygate. He described the scandal as “fundamentally trivial” and “fluff” - saying the “seriousness” of Vladimir Putin ’s invasion made it look like “nonsense.”

The party's Spring Conference - the first such event held by the party since the days of David Cameron - has been seen as an attempt by Boris Johnson to kick his team into election mode, and cement his position as leader into the next election. In his speech, party chairman Oliver Dowden declared that the Tories, as of the May local elections, would be gearing up for a General Election poll within two years, issuing a call for candidates from "all walks of life".

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He told reporters later on Friday that there was "plenty of time" to make fiscal decisions before voters elect the next government.

The former culture secretary appeared to suggest it was no accident that the party had returned to Blackpool - previously a mainstay on the party conference circuit - for the first time since 2007, saying his outfit needed to be the "party of mill towns and mining towns as well as the metropolis".

Mr Johnson is set to give a speech from the main stage of the conference today.

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