‘It feels like the end’: FIFTH Boris aide quits as Cabinet figures say there is a ’50/50′ chance PM will be forced out after exodus of No10 staff amid fears ministers will follow – as Tory MPs warn he must ‘shape up or ship out’
- Cabinet ministers believe there is a ’50/50′ chance Boris Johnson will be ousted
- Some ministers believe that ‘it feels like the end’ for Mr Johnson’s premiership
- Downing Street suffered a day of chaos yesterday as four senior aides resigned
- Furious Conservative MPs warned Mr Johnson he must ‘shape up or ship out’
- But allies of PM insist No10 clearout is evidence of Mr Johnson ‘taking charge’
Boris Johnson has been rocked by another Downing Street resignation after a fifth aide quit as Cabinet ministers said they believe there is a ’50/50′ chance the PM will be forced out.
Elena Narozanski, a member of the Number 10 Policy Unit, resigned this morning, according to the Conservative Home website.
Some senior ministers believe ‘it feels like the end’ after yesterday’s exodus amid mounting fears in Downing Street that more staff and even ministers could resign.
But the Prime Minister’s allies have insisted the shake-up is actually evidence of Mr Johnson ‘taking charge’.
Senior Tory MPs today issued a fresh warning to Mr Johnson that he must ‘shape up or ship out’.
Number 10 was in meltdown last night as the PM ordered a brutal clearout in a desperate attempt to shore up his troubled premiership as Rishi Sunak primed himself for a leadership bid.
Downing Street announced that the PM’s chief of staff Dan Rosenfield and private secretary Martin Reynolds will be leaving.
That announcement came after it emerged the PM’s communications chief, Jack Doyle, was also departing.
Mr Johnson had already been hit by the shock resignation of one of his closest allies, policy chief Munira Mirza.
Mr Johnson was also publicly criticised by the Chancellor who questioned the PM’s conduct over his explosive claim that Sir Keir Starmer had failed to prosecute Jimmy Savile.
The Chancellor also later penned an opinion piece for The Sun in which he attempted to bolster his potential leadership credentials in a thinly-veiled bid for the top job.
He declared: ‘We’ve always been the party of sound money, we’ll always continue to be on my watch, and that’s the only kind of party I’m interested in.’
The Government is now bracing for the potential resignation of some ministers.
Mr Johnson reportedly had to convince minister Alex Chalk, the solicitor-general, not to quit as his power continues to ebb away.
The clearout of aides had been planned for next week, but was brought forward after Miss Mirza quit over Mr Johnson’s attack on Sir Keir.
Downing Street was in meltdown last night as Boris Johnson ordered a brutal clearout of senior aides in a bid to shore up his troubled premiership. Pictured: The PM seen leaving Downing St earlier today
The clearout had been planned for next week, but was brought forward after a turbulent few hours triggered mounting panic in Downing Street about the Prime Minister’s position, starting with the shock resignation of one his closest allies, policy chief Munira Mirza
Mr Johnson was hit by the shock resignation of one his closest allies, policy chief Munira Mirza (left). Shortly afterwards it emerged the PM’s communications chief, Jack Doyle (right), was also departing
A voter in the Southend West by election made their feelings clear by spoiling their ballot with the words: ‘Boris do a Brexit, get out!’
In a dramatic move, No 10 said the Prime Minister’s chief of staff Dan Rosenfield (left) and private secretary Martin Reynolds (right) will leave in the wake of the Partygate scandal
Aides who went in dramatic clearout
MUNIRA MIRZA – POLICY CHIEF
QUIT AT 3:26PM
Miss Mirza has worked with Boris Johnson for 14 years and her departure was a real surprise to the PM. She quit in genuine fury at Mr Johnson’s refusal to apologise for his Jimmy Savile jibe at Sir Keir Starmer in the Commons.
JACK DOYLE – COMMUNICATIONS CHIEF
6:10PM
Mr Doyle said he quit because ‘recent weeks have taken a terrible toll on my family life’.
He said he had always intended to do the job for just two years, but was implicated in the Partygate scandal, having presented awards at a No 10 event.
MARTIN REYNOLDS – PRINCIPAL PRIVATE SECRETARY
7:45PM
Mr Reynolds became known as ‘Party Marty’ after sending the infamous ‘bring your own booze’ email to 100 Downing Street staff during lockdown.
A career diplomat, he will return to the Foreign Office.
DAN ROSENFIELD – CHIEF OF STAFF
7:45PM
Former Treasury civil servant Mr Rosenfield resigned after weeks of hostile briefing against him.
He has been accused by some Tory backbenchers of not building a strong enough relationship with the parliamentary party.
The chaos in Downing Street came after the total number of Tory MPs to have publicly confirmed sending letters of no confidence in Boris Johnson to 1922 Committee chairman Sir Graham Brady hit seven.
A handful of other Tories have publicly called for Mr Johnson to go but have not confirmed sending a letter.
The true number of letters to have been submitted is thought to be several times the seven figure because most MPs do not publicly divulge writing to Sir Graham.
The threshold for triggering a vote of no-confidence is currently set at 54 letters and many Tory MPs believe it is now ‘inevitable’ the figure will be reached.
Mr Johnson’s position in Number 10 is increasingly precarious and some Cabinet ministers believe there is a strong chance he will be forced to quit.
One Cabinet minister told The Times: ‘It feels like the end, it’s all falling apart. It’s 50/50 in my view at the moment.’
Another Cabinet minister said it is ‘difficult to tell’ if the PM will survive.
Meanwhile, a Downing Street figure told the newspaper a number of other Number 10 staff are ‘considering their positions’.
But a Cabinet minister told Politico: ‘He promised action on Monday night and the action has begun.
‘There’s more planned. The restructuring is on its way. It will unfold over the next 48 hours. He’ll move things up a gear and get some discipline.’
Energy Minister Greg Hands told Sky News this morning that the changes in Number 10 are evidence of the PM ‘taking charge’ following the publication of Sue Gray’s Partygate ‘update’ which criticised the leadership and culture in Downing Street.
‘Resignations have been made, resignations have been accepted,’ Mr Hands told Sky News.
‘The Prime Minister was absolutely clear on Monday that there would be changes at the top of No 10 and that is what he has delivered.
‘The Sue Gray report update said that there were failings at the top of the operation. This is the Prime Minister taking charge.
‘This is a wider issue than just the Sue Gray report. This is about saying we need changes at No 10, which is what the Prime Minister said on Monday.’
Meanwhile, a senior Tory MP today said Mr Johnson must improve or leave Downing Street for good.
Huw Merriman, the chairman of the Transport Select Committee, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I’m deeply troubled by what’s going on.
‘We all know that if the Prime Minister doesn’t ship up, then they have to shape out [sic], and that’s exactly what happened when this Prime Minister took over.
‘We know how it works. I’m sure the Prime Minister will be focused now on getting on with the job in hand, focusing on policy and regaining the public’s trust.’
Miss Mirza’s resignation yesterday afternoon was then followed by Mr Doyle’s resignation, with No 10 then moving to announce the sudden departures of Mr Rosenfield and Mr Reynolds.
Mr Reynolds, dubbed ‘Party Marty’, was the alleged organiser of the notorious ‘bring your own booze’ party in the No 10 garden, while Mr Rosenfield had been tipped to go after Sue Gray’s report identified ‘failures of leadership and judgment’ inside No 10.
Last night, a Government source told the Mail that the clearout showed the PM was serious about reforming No 10 – with loyalist MPs encouraged to publicly welcome the changes.
But others viewed the rushed announcements as a last-ditch gamble designed to prevent a draining of support for Mr Johnson.
Miss Mirza had stunned the PM, Downing Street and Westminster yesterday afternoon by announcing her resignation.
Miss Mirza, who had worked with Mr Johnson for 14 years, revealed she had issued him with an ultimatum over his controversial attack on Sir Keir about the failure of the Crown Prosecution Service to bring charges against Savile.
Mr Chalk, the MP for Cheltenham where he has a majority of just 981, also had a meeting with Mr Johnson on Wednesday after colleagues became concerned he was considering quitting.
A source told The Times Mr Chalk had ‘no plans to resign’ and he is thought to be waiting for the full Sue Gray report to be published.
In a partial climbdown yesterday, the PM said he had not been referring to the Labour leader’s ‘personal record’ in his controversial Savile remarks.
But, in an extraordinary resignation letter, Miss Mirza said his words fell short of the apology she had demanded, adding: ‘You are a better man than many of your detractors will ever understand, which is why it is desperately sad that you let yourself down by making a scurrilous accusation against the Leader of the Opposition.’
Less than two hours later, the Chancellor added to the Prime Minister’s woes by publicly distancing himself from his remarks about Sir Keir.
Speaking at a press conference in Downing Street that was ostensibly about the Government’s efforts to tackle the cost of living crisis, Mr Sunak said of Mr Johnson’s comments: ‘Being honest, I wouldn’t have said it.’
Less than two hours later, the Chancellor added to the Prime Minister’s woes by publicly distancing himself from his remarks about Sir Keir Starmer
Munira Mirza’s resignation letter
Dear Prime Minister,
It is with great regret that I am writing to resign as your Head of Policy.
You are aware of the reason for my decision: I believe it was wrong for you to imply this week that Keir Starmer was personally responsible for allowing Jimmy Savile to escape justice. There was no fair or reasonable basis for that assertion. This was not the normal cut-and-thrust of politics; it was an inappropriate and partisan reference to a horrendous case of child sex abuse. You tried to clarify your position today but, despite my urging, you did not apologise for the misleading impression you gave.
I have served you for 14 years and it has been a privilege to do so. You have achieved many important things both as Prime Minister and, before that, as Mayor of London. You are a man of extraordinary abilities with a unique talent for connecting with people.
You are a better man than many of your detractors will ever understand which is why it is desperately sad that you let yourself down by making a scurrilous accusation against the Leader of the Opposition.
Even now, I hope you find it in yourself to apologise for a grave error of judgement made under huge pressure. I appreciate that our political culture is not forgiving when people say sorry, but regardless, it is the right thing to do. It is not too late for you but, I’m sorry to say, it is too late for me.
Yours sincerely,
Munira
The rushed nature of last night’s No 10 departures became clear as it emerged that no replacements have been lined up to replace Mr Rosenfield, Mr Reynolds or Mr Doyle.
But Mr Johnson appears to have felt he had no choice but to try to reassert his grip following a week in which his authority has appeared to drain away.
Last weekend, the PM’s allies were confident they had seen off the immediate threat to his leadership and were on the verge of standing down a shadow whipping operation put in place to save him.
But to the dismay of party whips, disgruntled MPs have continued to emerge in dribs and drabs to call for Mr Johnson to resign.
Although no-one knows whether the number of letters of no confidence is close to the 54 needed to trigger a leadership contest, allies of the PM fear a confidence vote is ‘all but inevitable’.
In another blow, influential West Midlands mayor Andy Street also criticised the Prime Minister, saying his behaviour was ‘bad by any measure’.
The departure of four of Mr Johnson’s most senior aides threatens to leave a vacuum at the heart of No 10.
Mr Johnson moved swiftly to appoint former TV executive Andrew Griffith as his new policy chief, and a recruitment process is said to be already under way to find replacements for Mr Rosenfield and Mr Reynolds.
Mr Doyle, a former Daily Mail journalist, told friends he believed the PM needed a new communications chief for the ‘next phase of his premiership’.
Mr Johnson, who once praised Miss Mirza as a ‘brilliant thinker’ and listed her as one of the five women who had influenced and inspired him the most, denied his Savile comment was inappropriate.
But he told Channel 5 News: ‘I’m sorry to lose Munira, she’s done an outstanding job.’
Chief Secretary to the Treasury Simon Clarke last night hinted at the grim mood among the PM’s allies.
Appearing on Channel 4 News, Mr Clarke was asked: ‘Does it feel like the last days of Rome in there?’
He replied: ‘It doesn’t. I mean… the last days of Rome, I think, were more fun.’
But loyal MPs last night tried to flood social media with supportive messages. Joy Morrissey tweeted: ‘The PM promised changes to the No 10 operation earlier this week, glad to see him delivering.’
The Bradford-raised brainbox who values integrity above all and was one of the last Boris ‘true believers’ in No10… but has close ties to Rishi Sunak
Munira Murza was one of Boris Johnson’s last allies in Downing Street
Despite the bluff and bonhomie of his public persona, Boris Johnson has always been short of close friends at Westminster.
And since he became PM many of his most trusted allies have fallen by the wayside.
Munira Mirza was one of the last remaining ‘true believers’, having been by his side since London mayor days.
The 44-year-old was regarded as someone in whom Mr Johnson would confide and felt comfortable bouncing ideas off.
After the departure of Dominic Cummings and his subsequent campaign to oust the premier – spilling a slew of behind the scenes secrets in the process – that was a highly valued quality.
In recent weeks there has been a rising expectation that Mr Johnson faces losing more close lieutenants over Partygate, with communications direction Jack Doyle and permanent secretary Martin Reynolds under huge pressure.
But Ms Mirza’s departure from the Downing Street policy unit over the Jimmy Savile jibe at Keir Starmer is a blindsiding blow, that will raise alarm among Mr Johnson’s limited praetorian guard that he is passing the point of no return.
And there will be mutterings about whether it part of a Rishi Sunak coup operation. Ms Mirza is married to Dougie Smith, a friend of Mr Sunak who is a strategist and opposition researcher in No10.
And the journalist who broke the story was Spectator political editor James Forsyth, whose best man was Mr Sunak when he married Allegra Stratton – who dramatically quit over Partygate after being effectively cut adrift by the PM.
A former member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, Ms Mirza was once named by the PM as one of the five women who have shaped his life.
A long-time aide dating back to his time as London mayor, she preferred to work away from the limelight and has little public profile.
She was appointed as Mr Johnson’s cultural adviser when he entered City Hall on the recommendation of his chief of staff Nick Boles, the sometime Tory MP who co-founded Policy Exchange.
Previously she had worked for the think-tank and been a speechwriter for David Cameron.
Initially she is said to have made clear to Mr Johnson that she was not a Conservative Party member or ‘tribal’.
But the pair soon developed a strong working relationship that continued through Mr Johnson’s wilderness years and into Downing Street.
The Oldham-born academic was a popular figure around No10, with one source previously saying: .’She has a huge brain but wears it lightly. Boris listens to her.’
It was his failure to listen to her that sparked today’s resignation.
Mirza’s family came to Britain from Pakistan, with her father finding work as a factory while her mother taught Urdu part time.
She attended Breeze High School and Oldham Sixth Form College, where she was the only pupil to gain a place at Oxford, where she studied English Literature.
Despite her low public profile she has attracted the ire of the PM’s political opponents.
In a 2017 piece for the Sun, Ms Mirza said that anti-racism campaigners have a ‘culture of grievance’ and appeasing them was ‘not making Britain a fairer place but harming the very people they aspire to help’.
Before moving into Tory politics in 2003, her husband Mr Smith co-founded Fever Parties, an agency which organised sex parties for up to 50 couples at a time from London’s ‘fast set’.
He was responsible for hosting orgies for the beautiful and wealthy in Mayfair townhouses.
Mr Smith has insisted his different work ventures did not ‘overlap’.
In June last year Ms Mirza was asked to set up a new race inequality commission.
Supporters said at the time she is an advocate of data-driven policies, but campaigners and Labour MPs argued she is a denier of institutional racism and should not be playing a key role in the response to the BLM protests.
She appeared on BBC Radio 4’s Great Lives series in 2009, with 20th-century German political theorist Hannah Arendt as her subject.
She told the programme: ‘She was a very brave woman, brave in what she said and did.
‘She always did what she thought was the right thing rather than what was popular, what was safe… She always had integrity.’
Ruthless Rishi twists the knife: After policy chief quits over PM’s Jimmy Savile jibe at Keir Starmer, Sunak insists he wouldn’t have said it
Rishi Sunak publicly rebuked Boris Johnson yesterday over his explosive claim that Sir Keir Starmer failed to prosecute Jimmy Savile.
In an extraordinary move, the Chancellor launched his attack on the Prime Minister from the lectern at a Downing Street press conference.
It came shortly after Munira Mirza, the PM’s policy chief, announced she was quitting over the PM’s use of the ‘scurrilous accusation’ against the Labour leader.
Addressing the issue in a live broadcast on the cost-of-living crisis yesterday, Mr Sunak said of Mr Johnson’s attack on Sir Keir: ‘I wouldn’t have said it.’ In a further sign of turmoil at the heart of government, the Chancellor was last night in turn criticised by his own deputy, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Simon Clarke, who said Mr Johnson was ‘within his rights to say what he said’.
Rishi Sunak launched as attack on the Prime Minister from the lectern at Downing Street press conference
And, in a separate interview yesterday, Mr Sunak fuelled fevered speculation he wants to replace Mr Johnson when he refused to rule out a Tory leadership bid.
Last night government whips were braced for a potential flurry of letters from Tory MPs demanding Mr Johnson face a confidence vote, amid fears that a minister may walk.
In the Commons on Tuesday, the Prime Minister told MPs that as director of public prosecutions Sir Keir had ‘spent most of his time prosecuting journalists and failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile’.
Yesterday he sought to ‘clarify’ his remarks. Mr Johnson said: ‘I want to be very clear about this because a lot of people have got very hot under the collar, and I understand why.
‘I’m talking not about the Leader of the Opposition’s personal record when he was DPP and I totally understand that he had nothing to do personally with those decisions. I was making a point about his responsibility for the organisation as a whole.’
But soon after, Munira Mirza, who had been one of the PM’s most loyal advisers, serving him since he became London mayor in 2008, announced she was quitting.
The No 10 head of policy said in an excoriating resignation letter: ‘I believe it was wrong for you to imply this week that Keir Starmer was personally responsible for allowing Jimmy Savile to escape justice.
‘There was no fair or reasonable basis for that assertion. This was not the usual cut and thrust of politics; it was an inappropriate and partisan reference to a horrendous case of child sex abuse.
Mr Sunak publicly rebuked Boris Johnson over his claim that Keir Starmer failed to prosecute Jimmy Savile (pictured)
‘You tried to clarify your position today but, despite my urging, you did not apologise for the misleading impression you gave. You are a better man than many of your detractors will ever understand which is why it is so desperately sad that you let yourself down by making a scurrilous accusation against the Leader of the Opposition.’
The Chancellor was asked about Miss Mirza’s resignation and Mr Johnson’s remarks while appearing at a press conference in No 10 after setting out emergency measures to help people struggling with soaring energy bills. ‘She was a valued colleague,’ he said. ‘I very much enjoyed working with her and I’m sorry to see her leave government.
‘With regards to the comments, being honest I wouldn’t have said it and I’m glad the Prime Minister clarified what he meant.’ Asked if he thought the PM should apologise, Mr Sunak said: ‘That’s for the Prime Minister to decide.’
But a couple of hours later, Mr Sunak’s deputy Mr Clarke took to the airwaves to defend Mr Johnson. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury told Channel 4 News: ‘I have highest regard for the Chancellor, I work very closely with him on a whole range of policies. But it is my view that it was a perfectly reasonable remark for the Prime Minister to have made.’
Earlier, the Chancellor warned that the Partygate row had damaged trust in the Government and acknowledged some Tory MPs would like to see him in No 10.
But he insisted the prospect of a leadership contest remained a ‘hypothetical situation’ and that the PM had his full support.
Asked about backbenchers wanting him to take over, Mr Sunak told the BBC: ‘Well, that’s very kind of them of them to suggest that, but what I think people want from me is to focus on my job.’
Mr Sunak acknowledged the Government needed to rebuild public confidence following the disclosures over parties during lockdown. ‘I can appreciate people’s frustration,’ he added.
A minister who is close to Miss Mirza said yesterday the Savile issue had been the ‘final straw but not the first’.
Last night there was speculation in Westminster about whether Mr Sunak’s comments and Miss Mirza’s resignation had been a co-ordinated move against Mr Johnson.
The news that she was leaving was broken by The Spectator’s political editor James Forsyth, who has been a close friend of the Chancellor since they attended Winchester College together.
Mr Sunak was best man at his wedding to the PM’s former press secretary Allegra Stratton – who resigned at the beginning of the Partygate saga. In a further link, Miss Mirza is married to Dougie Smith, another key aide in No 10 who is friends with Mr Sunak.
Are Team Rishi making their move? The long-time ally who has ‘beheaded’ Boris by quitting is married to the ex-swingers’ club-running friend of the Chancellor… and the story was broken by a journalist who is godfather to his children
By James Tapsfield, Political Editor For Mailonline
Despite the bluff and bonhomie of his public persona, Boris Johnson has always been short of close friends at Westminster.
And since he became PM many of his most trusted allies have fallen by the wayside.
Munira Mirza was one of the last remaining ‘true believers’, having been by his side since London mayor days.
But the 44-year-old also has intriguingly close personal links to Rishi Sunak, including through her Tory aide husband Dougie Smith.
And the political journalist who broke news of her resignation, James Forsyth, had Mr Sunak as best man at his wedding. Forsyth and his wife, former No10 spokeswoman Allegra Stratton, are also godparents to the Sunaks’ children.
The manoeuvring and intricate connections have sparked speculation that a full-scale coup is under way.
Rishi Sunak used a live televised press conference tonight to criticise the Prime Minister for his desperate jibe at the Opposition leader about the CPS’s failure to prosecute the notorious child sex beast when Sir Keir was its boss in 2009.
Ms Mirza’s departure from the Downing Street policy unit over the Jimmy Savile jibe at Keir Starmer is a blindsiding blow, that will raise alarm among Mr Johnson’s limited praetorian guard that he is passing the point of no return
Ms Mirza also has intriguingly close personal links to Rishi Sunak, including through her Tory aide husband Dougie Smith. And the political journalist who broke news of her resignation, James Forsyth, had Mr Sunak as best man at his wedding. Forsyth and his wife, former No10 spokeswoman Allegra Stratton, are also godparents to the Sunaks’ children
One veteran Tory aide told MailOnline: ‘Munira isn’t so much a stab in the back as a big f***ing beheading.’
Ms Mirza has been regarded as someone in whom Mr Johnson would confide and felt comfortable bouncing ideas off.
After the departure of Dominic Cummings and his subsequent campaign to oust the premier – spilling a slew of behind the scenes secrets in the process – that was a highly valued quality.
In recent weeks there has been a rising expectation that Mr Johnson faces losing more close lieutenants over Partygate, with communications direction Jack Doyle and permanent secretary Martin Reynolds under huge pressure.
But Ms Mirza’s departure from the Downing Street policy unit over the Jimmy Savile jibe at Keir Starmer is a blindsiding blow, that will raise alarm among Mr Johnson’s limited praetorian guard that he is passing the point of no return.
Munira Mirza, the Downing Street head of policy, said the decision to attack the Labour leader over a failure to prosecute the notorious child sex beast when he ran the CPS was ‘inappropriate and partisan’.
Who is Munira Mirza?
Ms Mirza first worked for the Prime Minister at least 13 years ago, but her background is not one that would traditionally be seen to lead to Conservatism.
She is the youngest daughter of Pakistani immigrants, her father a factory worker and her mother a housewife and Urdu teacher.
Ms Mirza grew up in Oldham and attended state schools before becoming the only student at her sixth form to win a place at Oxford.
It was during her study at Mansfield College that she joined the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP), contributing to its magazine Living Marxism.
She went on to study for a PhD in sociology at the University of Kent under Professor Frank Furedi, who co-founded the RCP, which had then dissolved.
She had various jobs in the culture and charity sectors, including at the Royal Society of Arts, the Policy Exchange think tank, and the Tate, before being made arts adviser to Mr Johnson, aged 30, when he was elected as Mayor of London in 2008.
During Mr Johnson’s time at City Hall, she was promoted, in 2012, to the deputy mayor for education and culture, and was described by his former head of communications at City Hall Guto Harri as ‘the perfect counter to those critics who suspected the worse of Boris’.
Ms Mirza is reported to have been a supporter of Brexit far before Mr Johnson, and once joined a protest against a ban on drinking on the London Underground which involved riding around the Circle Line while day drinking.
In 2018, when the Prime Minister’s comments about women in burkas hit the headlines, Ms Mirza – a Muslim – launched a passionate defence of him in the media.
Ms Mirza reportedly helped write the manifesto that got Mr Johnson to No 10. Once he became Prime Minister, she was brought in immediately as one of his inner circle.
Ms Mirza has mainly stayed out of the limelight, until she was revealed as playing a major role in the setting up of the PM’s commission on racial disparity in 2020, following the Black Lives Mater demonstrations.
Critics said she was the wrong person for the job as she had previously questioned the existence of institutional racism and hit out at a ‘culture of grievance’ among anti-racism campaigners.
But Mr Johnson defended her in the Commons as ‘a brilliant thinker about these issues’.
In a profile of Ms Mirza and her husband Dougie Smith – also a powerful force in the Tory party – The Daily Telegraph reported how she had, as recently as December 2018, described herself as ‘left-wing’.
And there will be mutterings about whether it part of a Rishi Sunak coup operation. Ms Mirza is married to Dougie Smith, a friend of Mr Sunak who is a strategist and opposition researcher in No10.
And the journalist who broke the story was Spectator political editor James Forsyth, whose best man was Mr Sunak when he married Allegra Stratton – the spokeswoman who dramatically quit over Partygate after being effectively cut adrift by the PM.
A former member of the Revolutionary Communist Party, in 2020 Ms Mirza was named by the PM as one of the five women who have shaped his life.
She was on the list along with campaigner Malala Yousafzai, his grandmother, queen of the British Iceni tribe Boudicca, and singer/songwriter Kate Bush.
Of Ms Mirza he said: ‘Munira is capable of being hip, cool, groovy and generally on trend.’
Up to now she has been fiercely loyal to Mr Johnson.
In 2018, when the Prime Minister’s comments about women in burkas hit the headlines, Ms Mirza – a Muslim – launched a passionate defence of him in the media.
A long-time aide dating back to his time as London mayor, she preferred to work away from the limelight and has little public profile.
She was appointed as Mr Johnson’s cultural adviser when he entered City Hall on the recommendation of his chief of staff Nick Boles, the sometime Tory MP who co-founded Policy Exchange.
Previously she had worked for the think-tank and been a speechwriter for David Cameron.
Initially she is said to have made clear to Mr Johnson that she was not a Conservative Party member or ‘tribal’.
But the pair soon developed a strong working relationship that continued through Mr Johnson’s wilderness years and into Downing Street.
The Oldham-born academic was a popular figure around No10, with one source previously saying: .’She has a huge brain but wears it lightly. Boris listens to her.’
It was his failure to listen to her that sparked today’s resignation.
Mirza’s family came to Britain from Pakistan, with her father finding work as a factory while her mother taught Urdu part time.
She attended Breeze High School and Oldham Sixth Form College, where she was the only pupil to gain a place at Oxford, where she studied English Literature.
Despite her low public profile she has attracted the ire of the PM’s political opponents.
In a 2017 piece for the Sun, Ms Mirza said that anti-racism campaigners have a ‘culture of grievance’ and appeasing them was ‘not making Britain a fairer place but harming the very people they aspire to help’.
Before moving into Tory politics in 2003, her husband Mr Smith co-founded Fever Parties, an agency which organised sex parties for up to 50 couples at a time from London’s ‘fast set’.
He was responsible for hosting orgies for the beautiful and wealthy in Mayfair townhouses.
Mr Smith has insisted his different work ventures did not ‘overlap’.
Ms Mirza reportedly helped write the manifesto that got Mr Johnson to No10.
In June last year she was asked to set up a new race inequality commission.
Supporters said at the time she is an advocate of data-driven policies, but campaigners and Labour MPs argued she is a denier of institutional racism and should not be playing a key role in the response to the BLM protests.
She appeared on BBC Radio 4’s Great Lives series in 2009, with 20th-century German political theorist Hannah Arendt as her subject.
She told the programme: ‘She was a very brave woman, brave in what she said and did.
‘She always did what she thought was the right thing rather than what was popular, what was safe… She always had integrity.’
What is the TRUTH behind PM’s Jimmy Savile ‘smear’ on Keir Starmer? The facts and fiction after Boris Johnson accused the Labour leader of failing to prosecute notorious paedophile when he was DPP
Boris Johnson has accused former director of public prosecutions Sir Keir Starmer of having ‘used his time prosecuting journalists and failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile’ – and doubled down in the Commons today.
But the Labour leader has said Mr Johnson is ‘debasing himself by going so low’ by repeating ‘a ridiculous slur peddled by right wing trolls’.
And today he used PMQs to accuse Mr Johnson of ‘parroting the conspiracy theories of violent fascists to try to score cheap political points’. The PM then refused to withdraw his comments, despite calls from his own MPs to do so.
In 2012 a QC-led inquiry exonerated Sir Keir, finding he was not involved in the decision not to put Savile in the dock two years before he died, blaming it on hapless starstruck police officers and an incurious local prosecutor.
Boris Johnson was under fire in the Commons about Partygate when he accused Sir Keir Starmer of letting Jimmy Savile avoid justice. Mr Starmer looked furious as he heard the PM say it (right), claiming Tory MPs were similarly angry
During Sir Keir’s tenure as director of public prosecutions from 2008 to 2013, detectives had sought advice from the CPS on four allegations that Savile had sexually assaulted girls and young women in the 1970s.
In October 2009, the CPS reviewing lawyer with responsibility for the cases advised that since none of the complainants was ‘prepared to support any police action’, no prosecutions could be brought.
Savile, who abused 500 women and children, died in 2011 without facing justice.
In 2012, after it became clear the Top of the Pops host had attacked and abused hundreds of children and women in hospitals, schools and while filming his BBC shows, an inquiry was carried out Alison Levitt QC, on Mr Starmer’s own orders.
In 2013 her report found that the decision was made by police and prosecutors locally, not Sir Keir, who was unaware of it. The CPS would also say there was ‘no reference to any involvement from the DPP in the decision-making within a report examining the case.’
Alison Levitt QC found that police treated the victims and the accounts they gave ‘with a degree of caution which was neither justified nor required’.
Savile also made veiled threats against officers if sexual abuse allegations against him did not ‘disappear’.
Detectives looking at allegations advised the CPS not to prosecute Savile, believing his explanation that it was all made up and the price of being famous.
Ms Levitt was also critical of the approach taken by the CPS’ reviewing lawyer, but did not suggest that Mr Starmer was personally involved in the decisions made.
The lawyer was also criticised for failing to properly build a case with the police or spot inconsistencies in their reports after interviewing Savile under caution and four of his victims.
As head of the CPS, Sir Keir later apologised, admitting the failure to prosecute Savile was a ‘watershed moment’ for the organisation. But avoided any admonishment in Ms Levitt’s report.
He said: ‘I would like to take the opportunity to apologise for the shortcomings in the part played by the CPS in these cases.
‘These were errors of judgement by experienced and committed police officers and a prosecuting lawyer acting in good faith and attempting to apply the correct principles. That makes the findings of Ms Levitt’s report more profound and calls for a more robust response.’
Lawyer turned Labour leader Sir Keir then left in 2013 to pursue a career in politics.
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