Carrie
Johnson is not only the consort of the Prime Minister, Boris Johnson; she is
also considered by some to be the second most powerful unelected woman in
Britain after the Queen. Since she moved into Downing Street in July 2019,
questions have been raised about her perceived influence, her apparent desire
to control events, and the number of her associates who have been appointed to
positions of standing in the government machine. So, are these concerns
justified?
In this
carefully researched unauthorised biography, Michael Ashcroft charts the
extraordinary ascent of Mrs Johnson, speaking to multiple sources who have been
close to her and to Boris Johnson in recent years to produce a fascinating
portrait of a woman who is still under the age of thirty-five.
The book
scrutinises Mrs Johnson’s colourful family, her attempt to become a
professional actress, and her early decision to work in politics. Long before
she moved into No. 10, Mrs Johnson made a name for herself as a Conservative
Party press aide before becoming a special adviser to two Cabinet ministers and
eventually director of communications at Conservative campaign headquarters.
Aside from politics, she is also the mother of two young children and campaigns
in the fields of the environment and animal welfare.
Carrie
Johnson is without doubt a very modern prime ministerial spouse. This
examination of her career and life offers the electorate the chance to assess
exactly what role she plays in Boris Johnson’s unpredictable administration and
why that matters.
‘Regurgitated lies,’ says Carrie Johnson as Lord
Ashcroft’s new biography debuts
The former Conservative Party deputy chairman’s latest
book has been dubbed ‘sexist’ by defenders of the Prime Minister’s wife
By Anya
Meyerowitz
14 February
2022
https://www.tatler.com/article/carrie-johnson-lord-ashcroft-biography-sexist-attacks-criticism
Lord
Ashcroft is no stranger to writing books on political figures, previously
penning biographies on Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor of the
Exchequer Rishi Sunak, but his latest seems set to be his most controversial
yet. His book about the Prime Minister’s wife, First Lady: Intrigue at the
Court of Carrie and Boris Johnson, debuts next month, and has already sparked
allegations of ‘sexist’ attacks – now even prompting a response from its
subject herself.
The book,
currently being serialised in the Mail on Sunday, includes claims that Carrie
often took time off work to enjoy holidays abroad, such as in St Tropez,
Mustique, Tuscany, Paris and New York; and that she allegedly expensed taxis
she booked under the names of junior aides while working as the Conservative
Party’s director of communications.
According
to the Times, a spokesperson for the Prime Minister’s wife has dismissed such
accusations, stating: ‘These regurgitated lies regarding Mrs Johnson’s
employment record are spiteful and damaging. Carrie left her role to pursue her
passion in ocean conservation and later in animal welfare.’
Lord
Ashcroft reportedly rebuffed the response, saying Boris Johnson’s attention had
been diverted by ‘arguments about wallpaper, his Caribbean holiday, Downing
Street parties and the behaviour of Dilyn the dog’ and dubbing Carrie a
‘legitimate subject’ for a biography.
The latest
comments come after Carrie’s spokesperson previously said of the book: ‘Yet
again Mrs Johnson has been targeted by a brutal briefing campaign against her
by enemies of her husband. This is just the latest attempt by bitter
ex-officials to discredit her. She is a private individual who plays no role in
government.’
In the
biography, currently available to pre-order ahead of its official release on 29
March, former Conservative Party deputy chairman Lord Ashcroft also accuses
Boris Johnson of appointing staff because ‘Carrie would be cross with him’ if
he did not, sacking officials she disliked and reversing settled government
policy after his wife criticised it.
One of the
book’s sources likens their ‘toxic’ relationship to a Greek tragedy, saying:
‘He could have been a great prime minister but his lack of discipline, which
led him to get involved with Carrie, has cost him. His potential to transform
the country has been squandered and, as far as I’m concerned, it’s because of
her.’
Ashcroft’s
biography also alleges that Mrs Johnson, then Symonds, began pursuing the PM
when he was foreign secretary and still married to his second wife Marina, in
an attempt to get herself appointed as his chief of staff.
A number of
commentators have weighed in defending the Prime Minister’s wife, including
Health and Social Care Secretary Sajid Javid. When asked about the biography
during a Sky News interview, Javid said: ‘It’s sexist. First rule, I think, the
partners of politicians should be off limits. Why would you go after, attack,
the partners of politicians?
‘Going
after Carrie Johnson is undignified, it’s unfair and it’s just wrong. She has
no formal role in government... why is she any different to anyone who came
before her as a partner of a prime minister?’
Sarah Vine,
the former wife of Housing, Communities and Local Government Secretary Michael
Gove, echoed Javid’s words, saying that there was ‘more than a whiff of
misogyny’ in the criticism, which she called ‘the political equivalent of
slut-shaming’.
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