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Brexiteer Tory grandee humiliates Johnson over treatment of deselected rebel MPs

Former Home Secretary Lord Kenneth Baker, a Brexiteer, has slammed Boris Johnson's treatment of the rebel MPs who voted against him. Picture: Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive/PA Images - Credit: PA Archive/PA Images

A former chairman of the Conservative party, who supports Brexit, spoke of ‘swivel-eyed ideologues’ as he condemned Boris Johnson’s treatment of the 21 MPs who rebelled against the government.

Lord Kenneth Baker made scathing comments as he called on Central Office to allow them to stand again at the next election.

In a stinging assessment, the Tory grandee who served as a minister under Margaret Thatcher said: “These 21 MPs are not parvenus seeking to infiltrate the party, they are lifelong Tories in their mind and in their bones.”

The comments are even more humiliating for the prime minister as Lord Baker is a eurosceptic who supports Brexit.

He warned that the party owed its success to being a broad church, he called for the rebels to be able to stand as Tories at the next election if they are selected by their local party associations.

The intervention of such a long-serving and influential party figure is likely to fuel disquiet among some Tories over the possible consequences of using the “blunt instrument” of deselection against the MPs who voted against the government on Tuesday night.

Party activists in Phillip Hammond’s Runnymede and Weybridge seat have predicted that the former chancellor could keep his seat even as a newly-made independent after his expulsion.

In a statement released to PA, Lord Baker said: “The threat of the deselection of Tory rebels has proved to be a blunt instrument and when blunt instruments don’t work, they tend to hurt the wielder more than the target.

“That is why in its long and successful history the Conservative Party has shrunk from using it.

“There was a sizeable group of MPs who opposed Margaret Thatcher, but I do not recall any being deselected.

“The success of the Conservative Party over 300 years is due to being always a broad church accommodating the diverse interests, concerns and views of individuals who nonetheless support the party as an instrument for good government and for wise political change on the big issues of the time.

“During that time the Conservative Party has been successful in keeping the determination of policy away from swivel-eyed ideologues who are happier in movements rather than parties.

“It has never been left to the whips office to decide who should be a Tory or not.

“If the Conservative Party is to govern successfully, and I support Boris Johnson in his determination to leave Europe, reconciliation should be in the air.

“Speaking as a former Conservative Party chairman, I would recommend to Central Office that any of the 21 rebel MPs who are actually selected by their local Conservative Association should be allowed to stand as the only Conservative candidate in the ensuing election.

“These 21 MPs are not parvenus seeking to infiltrate the party, they are lifelong Tories in their mind and in their bones.

“The local Conservative Associations are the active workers who should be trusted to support the people they know.

“Didn’t Randolph Churchill say, ‘Trust the people’.”

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