Tories blasted No10 as an ‘incompetent shower’ today amid alarm over a slew of coronavirus U-turns – and signs the crisis has done huge damage to Boris Johnson’s reputation.
MPs warned that the situation could not be allowed to continue, with fears that aides are obsessed with ‘gimmicks’ rather than governing and contriving to made a difficult situation even worse.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak is also facing a backlash over signs that taxes could rise, with jibes that he lacks the ‘political maturity’ to ignore Treasury officials who do not believe lowering the burden could actually bring in more revenue.
The infighting came as a poll for MailOnline found 39 per cent of the public have a more negative view of the PM due to the shambolic handling of the pandemic.
Meanwhile, just 21 per cent said their opinion had improved, according to the research by Redfield & Wilton Strategies. Alarmingly for Downing Street, the results were starkly different for Labour leader Keir Starmer – with his stock having risen significantly.
Mr Johnson was roasted at PMQs yesterday for overseeing ‘mess after mess’ after the latest chaotic shift of position on lockdowns. Bolton and Trafford were among a series of areas in the North West due to see restrictions eased – but the plan was abandoned at the last moment.
Sir Graham Brady, chair of the Conservative 1922 backbench committee, said this morning that the shift was ‘disappointing’. He also complained that there had been a problem for ‘months’ with official guidance on working from home contradicting the government’s push to get people back in offices.
And he warned that rumoured tax rises to fill the Treasury’s financial black hole left by Covid could ‘stifle’ the recovery.
‘The necessity is that we don’t make this crisis any worse than it needs to be,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
A poll for MailOnline by Redfield & Wilton Strategies found 39 per cent of the public have a more negative view of the PM due to the shambolic handling of the pandemic
Signs that Chancellor Rishi Sunak (pictured yesterday) is planning to increase taxes in the Autumn Budget to stabilise the government finances – with briefings about a 5p hike to fuel duty – have also caused widespread anger
One senior Tory MP told MailOnline that No10 was being run by an ‘incompetent shower’, and the PM must have the ‘self-confidence’ to sack people.
‘The public can accept that mistakes will be made, but when you make so many in such a short time, and so many U-turns, what it shows is incompetence,’ they said.
The MP complained that Dominic Cummings was pushing through ‘gimmicks’ like the new Nasa-style ‘mission control’ room in Whitehall, and a PM spokesman giving televised briefings.
‘When times are good you think of gimmicks. Right now is a moment to recognise that the country is in deep, deep trouble.’
The Tory said Education Secretary Gavin Williamson had to be axed after the exams bungles, but in the end Downing Street was ‘100 per cent responsible’ for the mishandling as it was so ‘controlling’.
‘Some of them need to go. If they don’t this will continue.’
There was also anger about signs taxes could be increased to balance the books, with demands Mr Sunak faces down Treasury civil servants and cuts tax instead. But the MP added gloomily: ‘I don’t think he is sufficiently politically mature to do it.’
Another former minister said the slew of briefing on tax looked like ‘kite flying’ as government desperately tried to work out how to handle the Red Wall MPs.
‘In 2010 the intake was elected to sort out the public finances. This intake thought they were getting Brexit done, and then having a good time spending a lot of money,’ the MP said.
‘No10 needs to get 100-plus MPs to think about what we can do to sort out the public finances.’
As the dramatic volte face on lockdown emerged yesterday, Mr Johnson was lashed by Sir Keir at PMQs for ‘making it up as he goes along’.
A clearly stung PM retorted by branding Sir Keir ‘Captain Hindsight’.
But ministers are increasingly scrambling to quell Tory unrest, with backbenchers incensed at the disastrous GCSE and A-Levels marking saga.
In a round of interviews this morning, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: ‘People understand, and your viewers understand, that we’re in an unprecedented situation, we’re dealing with a virus which we increasingly know more about, we’re also dealing with a virus which suddenly expands in areas… and therefore we have to take action.
‘If the numbers change of course… we move swiftly and decisively.’
Signs that Mr Sunak is planning to increase taxes in the Autumn Budget to stabilise the government finances – with briefings about a 5p hike to fuel duty – have also caused widespread anger.
Mr Johnson and Mr Sunak had a stormy meeting with around 100 MPs from ‘Red Wall’ constituencies yesterday afternoon.
The premier delivered a grim assessment that the crisis had ‘been tough’ but was ‘about to get tougher’. ‘The waters are about to get choppier,’ he said.
Mr Sunak pleaded for space to get the government back on track, saying they would have to be ‘honest’ with the public about the need to balance the books.
‘We will need to do some difficult things, but I promise you, if we trust one another we can overcome the short term challenges,’ he said.
‘Now this does’t mean a horror show of tax rises with no end in sight.
‘But it does mean treating the British people with respect, being honest with them about the challenges we face, and showing them how we plan to correct out public finances and give our country the dynamic, low-tax economy we all want to see.
However, the opposition such drastic steps would face was demonstrated when Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey used a round of interviews to suggest taxes should be cut in the Budget, saying it could actually bring in more revenue for the government. ‘This is what we will deliver for you.’
In another grim development, the Bank of England warned yesterday that the ‘scarring’ to the economy might be even worse than the permanent 1.5 per cent loss of GDP it previously predicted.
Giving evidence to the Treasury Select Committee, Governor Andrew Bailey and other senior figures also poured cold water on hopes of getting large numbers of people back in offices – considered crucial for reviving town and city centres.
Ms Coffey told Times Radio: ‘I will point out to you that in the past when we’ve actually cut tax rates, we’ve actually seen taxes increase.
‘So tax rates is a very dynamic situation, we need to make sure our chancellor has the best opportunities when he announces to the country in actually quite a short time…
‘Some people might assume the only way to get tax up is to increase tax rates but we have shown in our economic history the opposite.’
Appearing before MPs on the Treasury Committee this afternoon, Mr Bailey said on balance he still expected the long-term damage from the crisis to be equivalent to around 1.5 per cent of GDP.
But deputy governor Sir David Ramsden described the figure as a ‘good starting point’.
‘Unless the adjustment is very quick and happens quite easily the changes are that the scarring effects over time may be larger than that,’ he said.
‘We’ve highlighted that the risks are that the scarring impact could be greater than a shortfall of GDP of 1.5 per cent.’
He added: ‘For me all the risks are really that that number will be greater than 1.5 per cent.’
Mr Bailey said that while some areas, including the housing market, have been rebounding quickly, others, such as ‘social spending’ including restaurants and theatres, could take longer to recover.
He added that the bounceback in retail has in part been driven by online sales, as the proportion of items sold over the internet increased from 20 per cent to 30 per cent of the total in about a year.
‘This underlines the point on how much we are going to see structural changes,’ he said.
Some workers are likely to have to retrain to work in new sectors.
Mr Ramsden said: ‘One of the sectors where we’ve seen a lot of growth in employment in recent years is in retailing.
‘Potentially, as more retailing moves online, it may be that more investment could take place in capital stock than in labour. That would have an impact on the labour market… but it also could lead to greater productivity over time.’
He added that the Bank was only starting to scratch the surface on this ‘really complex set of factors’.
The executive director for financial stability, Alex Brazier also gave a downbeat assessment of the changes of getting people back to offices.
He said it was clear that the ‘people have a caution about the public health issues’.
Sir Graham Brady, chair of the Conservative 1922 backbench committee, complained that there had been a problem for ‘months’ with official guidance on working from home contradicting the government’s push to get people back in offices
Boris Johnson (left) branded Keir Starmer (right) ‘Captain Hindsight’ after the Labour leader accused him of overseeing ‘mess after mess’ at PMQs yesterday