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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Lanre Bakare

Sir Nicholas Soames says Tories started resembling 'Brexit sect'

Sir Nicholas Soames said Johnson had never been regarded as ‘a diplomat or statesman’.
Sir Nicholas Soames said Johnson had never been regarded as ‘a diplomat or statesman’. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA

Tory grandee Sir Nicholas Soames has launched a searing attack on Boris Johnson’s leadership and Jacob Rees-Mogg, whom he called a “fraud”, adding the Conservative party is lurching towards a divisive, potentially catastrophic form of “hard-right” conservatism.

In an interview with the Times, Soames – who is the grandson of Sir Winston Churchill – said the Conservatives were starting to resemble a “Brexit sect”, after he had the whip removed for rebelling against the Johnson government along with 20 other MPs.

“I am worried about the Tory party because give or take the odd spasm we have always been seen as pragmatic, sensible, good at our job, sane, reasonable and having the interests of the whole country,” he said. “Now it is beginning to look like a Brexit sect.”

Soames rejected comparisons between his grandfather and Johnson, saying the prime minister has never been regarded as “a diplomat or statesman” and his life experience amounts to “telling a lot of porkies about the European Union in Brussels and then becoming prime minister”.

Here is the list of the 21 Conservative MPs who voted with the opposition and against the government on Tuesday night’s motion to seize control of the parliamentary timetable in order to pave the way for a bill to block a no-deal Brexit.

Guto Bebb, Aberconwy

Richard Benyon, Newbury

Steve Brine, Winchester

Alistair Burt, North East Bedfordshire

Greg Clark, Tunbridge Wells

Kenneth Clarke, Rushcliffe

David Gauke, South West Hertfordshire

Justine Greening, Putney

Dominic Grieve, Beaconsfield

Sam Gyimah, East Surrey

Philip Hammond, Runnymede and Weybridge

Stephen Hammond, Wimbledon

Richard Harrington, Watford

Margot James, Stourbridge

Sir Oliver Letwin, West Dorset

Anne Milton, Guildford

Caroline Nokes, Romsey and Southampton North

Antoinette Sandbach, Eddisbury

Sir Nicholas Soames, Mid Sussex

Rory Stewart, Penrith and The Border

Edward Vaizey, Wantage

He singled out Jacob Rees-Mogg, calling his recent actions in the Commons “repulsive” and beneath the leader of the house. Rees-Mogg was criticised by Caroline Lucas for lounging on the benches of the Commons during a debate. “The leader of the house has been spread across three seats, lying out as if that was something very boring for him to listen to tonight,” she said.

Soames called Rees-Mogg an “absolute fraud” who is “a living example of what a moderately cut double-breasted suit and a decent tie can do with an ultra-posh voice and a bit of ginger stuck up his arse”.

He also spoke about his concerns for the future of his party, saying that he feared a schism, with many liberal Conservatives turning their backs on the “very hard-right Tory” version of the party that is taking shape under Johnson.

The former defence minister predicted that further Tory MPs would follow the lead of Jo Johnson, who quit this past week – citing conflict between family loyalty and the public interest – if they were forced to sign up to campaigning for a no-deal Brexit during any general election push.

He also expected hardcore no-deal Brexiters to turn on Johnson if he attempted to push through an arrangement with the EU, by tweaking the withdrawal agreement. “It is a tragedy that we are going to be potentially sunk on the altar of something so fundamentally un-Tory,” he said.

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