Matt Hancock backs ‘One Nation Tory’ Johnson for leader

Has Boris chosen his new Chancellor? Matt Hancock backs ‘One Nation Tory’ Johnson for leader as rivals brace for new regime

  • Health Secretary Matt Hancock will support Boris Johnson for Prime Minister
  • Mr Hancock quit the race after securing 20 votes from Tory MPs in the first round
  • Voters think Boris is the only candidate who can win a election, says new poll
  • But new poll puts the Brexit Party ahead of Labour, the Tories and the Lib Dems

Boris Johnson’s procession towards Downing Street gathered pace today as Matt Hancock backed him – amid claims he has already started promising Cabinet jobs.  

The Health Secretary dropped out on Friday after a disappointing result in the first round ballot, but has now put himself in the running to be the next Chancellor by endorsing the favourite.

The support of a former Remainer and Cabinet heavyweight will further reinforce Mr Johnson’s status as PM-in-waiting.

Despite snubbing the first Tory leadership TV debate last night, he is increasingly looking unstoppable – with rivals squabbling over who will come second. 

Matt Hancock quit the Tory leader race after securing just 20 votes in the first round – and has now endorsed Boris Johnson

Mr Johnson (pictured leaving his London home today) is looking unstoppable for next PM

Mr Johnson (pictured leaving his London home today) is looking unstoppable for next PM

Chancellor Philip Hammond will not survive the changeover to a Johnson regime, meaning the prized spot at No11 is up for grabs.

Treasury chief secretary Liz Truss has been pushing hard for the job, having backed Mr Johnson from the start.  

However, allies of Mr Johnson said he had been ‘inspired’ by Mr Hancock’s campaign and it is understood the pair spoke several times over the weekend. 

Mr Hancock said he ‘wholeheartedly endorsed’ Mr Johnson who he said can ‘bring the party and country together’ by ‘dominating the centre ground’.

He praised Mr Johnson’s ‘disciplined campaign’ and argued he is ‘almost certain’ to be the next PM. 

‘We need to unite behind him with a strong team that can bring the party together and then bring the country together,’ he told The Times. 

‘I have repeatedly argued for a strategy of defeating the danger of Farage by delivering Brexit and defeating the danger of Corbyn by dominating the centre ground thereafter. That is Boris’s plan and I wholeheartedly endorse it.’

It is a blow to Michael Gove who was vying for Mr Hancock’s endorsement.

‘Boris is keen to have a big Remainer on his team, it shows he has the full breadth of the party behind him’, said one pro-Boris MP.

Mr Hancock quit the race after securing just 20 votes in the first round with an admission that the party was not looking for the ‘candidate of the future’ but ‘a candidate for the unique circumstances we face right now’.

Mr Johnson’s team insisted no offers of a job in a future cabinet had been discussed. Mr Hancock is seen as a potential chancellor or business secretary in a Johnson administration.

It came as Mr Johnson’s campaign was buoyed by a poll showing voters believe he is the only leadership candidate who can win the next election. The YouGov poll for the Sunday Times showed the Brexit Party was now ahead of both the Tories and Labour.

It put Nigel Farage’s party on 24 per cent, three points ahead of Labour and the Tories on 21 per cent with the Lib Dems close behind on 19 per cent. A total of 47 per cent think Mr Johnson can see off Jeremy Corbyn and Nigel Farage and only 22 per cent disagree. 

Just 15 per cent say his nearest rival, Jeremy Hunt, can win the Tories another term in power. It also suggested Mr Johnson was the only candidate who would persuade voters to turn to the Tories. Some 22 per cent said they were more likely to vote Tory if he was leader.

None of his rivals scored more than 8 per cent. But 59 per cent of voters said they wouldn’t buy a used car from Mr Johnson.

An empty podium was left by Channel 4 to embarrass Boris Johnson after he snubbed the Tory leadership debate last night

An empty podium was left by Channel 4 to embarrass Boris Johnson after he snubbed the Tory leadership debate last night

A total of 47 per cent think Mr Johnson can see off Jeremy Corbyn and Nigel Farage (above) and only 22 per cent disagree. Just 15 per cent say his nearest rival, Jeremy Hunt, can win the Tories another term in power [File photo]

A total of 47 per cent think Mr Johnson can see off Jeremy Corbyn and Nigel Farage (above) and only 22 per cent disagree. Just 15 per cent say his nearest rival, Jeremy Hunt, can win the Tories another term in power [File photo]

The endorsement comes despite Mr Hancock having turned his fire on Mr Johnson in the early stages of the contest over his attacks on business. 

Mr Johnson reportedly said ‘f*** business’ in fury at the CBI and other business groups trying to spread scaremongering stories about No Deal.

Mr Hancock argued Mr Johnson had the ‘wrong attitude’ and told the BBC’s Today programme that it was vital for the Tories to ‘back business and not bash business’.

‘We need to support businesses because they’re the ones who create the jobs.’

Yesterday Mr Johnson fuelled rumours of an early general election after footage emerged of him saying he would ‘get Brexit done and get ready for an election’.

The comments came at hustings with party members on Saturday, but Mr Johnson’s team furiously denied the claim. They said he had repeatedly ruled out an early election and argued he was referring to the election in 2022.

Mr Johnson also won the endorsement of former work and pensions secretary Esther McVey and former Scotland Yard boss Bernard Hogan-Howe – now a cross-bench peer – who described him as a ‘really great mayor’ of London.

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