Nadine Dorries defends under-fire PM Boris Johnson in awkward BBC Breakfast interview

Nadine Dorries has continued to publicly back Boris Johnson after giving a toe-curlingly awkward televised interview in which she insisted he was truthful.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast on Saturday morning, Ms Dorries, 64, said the Prime Minister remained optimistic and his mood was ‘very positive’ despite a slew of his senior advisors abandoning the Government ship earlier this week. 

But the Culture Secretary clashed with host Charlie Stayt as she openly questioned why she was being asked if she had recently spoken with the Prime Minister.

Mr Stayt repeatedly asked if she had spoken with Mr Johnson over the last 24 hours – to which she replied: ‘Why are you asking me that question?’

She briefly smiles at the veteran broadcaster before adding: ‘We’ve communicated’.

After an excruciating pause, a puzzled Mr Stayt then says: ‘I’m really confused. Is that a difficult question? I’m just asking if you’ve spoken to the Prime Minister’.

Ms Dorries then repeats ‘we have communicated’, before refusing to expand on her original remarks when pressed further.

In later comments, she added the premier always tells the truth ‘to the best of his knowledge’, and pointed at information given to him by advisors and aides.

This week, the PM was rocked by the dramatic resignation of his long-serving policy chief Munira Mirza, one of the last aides remaining from his days as London mayor at City Hall. 

Mr Johnson is desperately trying to see off the growing threat of brewing Tory civil war, as more than a dozen Conservative MPs have written no confidence letters. 

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has continued to publicly back Boris Johnson after giving a toe-curlingly awkward BBC Breakfast interview in which she insisted he was truthful

Ms Dorries, 64, insisted the Prime Minister was optimistic and his mood was 'very positive' despite a slew of his senior advisors abandoning the Government ship earlier this week

Ms Dorries, 64, insisted the Prime Minister was optimistic and his mood was ‘very positive’ despite a slew of his senior advisors abandoning the Government ship earlier this week

BBC Breakfast host Charlie Stayt (left) repeatedly asked if Ms Dorries had spoken with Boris Johnson over the last 24 hours - to which she replied: 'Why are you asking me that question?'

BBC Breakfast host Charlie Stayt (left) repeatedly asked if Ms Dorries had spoken with Boris Johnson over the last 24 hours – to which she replied: ‘Why are you asking me that question?’

Ms Dorries has asserted herself as one of Mr Johnson’s most outspoken public defenders in recent months since she became a cabinet member in September.

She has frequently used Twitter and media interviews to shoot to the defence of the embattled PM, calling out Tory MPs who have publicly declared their intent to submit letters of no-confidence. 

Ms Dorries said those speaking out against the PM were ‘the same names that we continually keep (hearing) cropping up’ and were in ‘safe seats’. 

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, the Culture Secretary said Boris Johnson tells the truth ‘to the best of his knowledge’ based on advice given to him by aides. 

But she said: ‘What I would say is that the Prime Minister, when he appeared for the (19)22 Committee last week, promised to change and I think anybody who picks up a newspaper or reads a newspaper, sees a television news bulletin, can see that a huge amount of change is under way at present, particularly in No 10.’

Those watching on this morning quickly took to Twitter to react to Ms Dorries’ comments as some lambasted her ‘unnecessarily aggressive’ answers.

Nadine Dorries has asserted herself as one of Mr Johnson's most outspoken public defenders in recent months since she became a cabinet member in September

Nadine Dorries has asserted herself as one of Mr Johnson’s most outspoken public defenders in recent months since she became a cabinet member in September

Those watching on this morning quickly took to Twitter to react to Ms Dorries' comments as some lambasted her 'unnecessarily aggressive' answers

Those watching on this morning quickly took to Twitter to react to Ms Dorries’ comments as some lambasted her ‘unnecessarily aggressive’ answers

@HalyconNash wrote: ‘Unnecessarily aggressive and defensive answers from Nadine Dorries as per on BBC Breakfast.’

Richard Allen tweeted: ‘Well that was an awkward interview with @NadineDorries, not so much with Charlie’s questioning but with some guilty like reactions to them, refusal to answering them is a bit like the ‘No Comment’ in police interviews.’

Michael Davies added: ‘Can’t believe I’m saying this but I am sorry that I missed the Nadine Dorries interview.’ 

Andy Dobson joked: ‘Nadine Dorries’ insurance premiums must have skyrocketed this month with all the car crashes she’s been involved in.’ 

It comes days after Ms Dorries faced a wave of online memes and mockery as a picture showed what appeared to be her staring into Mr Johnson’s eyes.

The Culture Secretary was snapped staring at the premier by cameras in the House of Commons while Mr Johnson spoke at the despatch box at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday.  

The picture soon went viral and sparked hundreds of memes on Twitter, with envious online users saying they wished their partners looked at them the same way Ms Dorries had gazed at Mr Johnson. 

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries was snapped staring at the premier by cameras in the House of Commons while Boris Johnson spoke at the despatch box at Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries was snapped staring at the premier by cameras in the House of Commons while Boris Johnson spoke at the despatch box at Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday

Some questioned whether it was a ‘look of love’, while others quipped that Valentine’s Day is still more than a week away.  

Reacting to claims made about the number of people in work, Ms Dorries said on Saturday: ‘He will have been given by advisers and researchers the fact that there were more people in work than there were at the beginning of the pandemic, not on the payroll.

‘So did he tell the truth when he quoted that? Yes, he told the truth as it was given to him. The Prime Minister does tell the truth.’

‘I can personally tell you that the Prime Minister, when he stands at the despatch box and makes quotes like the one you just quoted, is because the researchers and his advisers will have given him that quote, and that’s… and he was truthful, to the best of his knowledge, when he made that quote,’ she said. 

She also mixed up two Tory MPs with similar names while defending Mr Johnson during her round of media interviews on Saturday morning.

Ms Dorries told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that comments from Nick Gibb and Aaron Bell were ‘disappointing’ but said those in ‘marginal seats’ knew the PM had won them the election.

She suggested those operating with slim majorities were ‘working damn hard and they want Boris Johnson in place’. 

She was then asked about the 2019 intake on Red Wall MPs – of which Mr Bell is one in his Newcastle-under-Lyme constituency.

But the Culture Secretary said: ‘So you want to cite Aaron Bell, again disappointing, I’ll talk about Martin Vickers, who’s up in the far North of England in South Tees.

‘I’ll talk about Martin Vickers who is out there supporting the Prime Minister, listing on Channel 4 News the other night the huge number of funding and initiatives that he’s delivered in his constituency.’

Martin Vickers is the MP for Cleethorpes in North East Lincolnshire and has been an MP since 2010. He currently has a majority of 21,418.

But, she was likely referring to Matt Vickers, who is MP for Stockton South (majority 5,260), in the Tees Valley, and was elected in 2019. He told Channel 4 on Wednesday: ‘Teesside’s got a lot to be happy about.’

Ms Dorries later suggested those who were against the Prime Minister were Remainers who wanted to get back at the PM for his role during Brexit.

She told Times Radio: ‘There are a small number of voices, whether they are people who were ardent supporters of Remain, who see this as their last opportunity to reverse Brexit.’

Asked whether the moves against Boris Johnson were a ‘Remainer plot’, Ms Dorries said: ‘There are a number of reasons actually, it’s not just one, but that certainly is at play with a group.’

She said it was ‘important that people don’t get hung up’ on a ‘small number’ of MPs.  

And the Culture Secretary later said Rishi Sunak was ‘entitled to his views’ over the Prime Minister’s claim about Sir Keir Starmer and Jimmy Savile – despite some internal calls for the PM to sack the Chancellor over his ‘wavering’ support.

Ms Dorries told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that ‘anybody who leads an organisation, like the Prime Minister leads the Government or Keir Starmer led the Crown Prosecution Service, when something goes wrong, you take responsibility and you apologise’.

Asked about the Chancellor saying he would not have made the comments, Ms Dorries said: ‘Rishi Sunak is entitled to his views and you know, he’s entitled to say… make any comments that he wants to.

‘What I would say is that when you lead an organisation, you are responsible, the responsibility lands on your desk for what happens within that organisation when you’re leading it.’

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