Tory fury as Sunak allies ‘parachuted’ into winnable seats
Rishi Sunak’s allies have been accused of “operating a chumocracy” in ”parachuting” special advisers and people close to the inner circle around the prime minister for winnable seats in the General election.
David Goss, the prime minister’s deputy political secretary, became the latest high profile figure from Downing Street to be selected for a winnable seat in Wellingborough and Rushden, recently lost to Labour in a gruelling by-election.
He followed former army officer James Clark, a special adviser to defence secretary Grant Shapps, being selected for Great Yarmouth last night.
Others to get winnable seats include former Home Office special adviser Katie Lam landing the Weald of Kent constituency last year.
Ameet Jogia, another Downing Street spad has landed Boris Johnson’s former Hendon seat, while yet another former number 10 spad Luke Gardiner has been selected in Mid Derbyshire.
Alice Hopkins, a current special adviser to home secretary James Cleverly has been shortlisted for Rochford and South East. Rishi Sunak’s deputy chief of staff Will Tanner is favourite for Stratford upon Avon vacated by former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi.
Head of strategy Jamie Njoku-Goodwin was in the running for Cities of London and Westminster and is still understood to be hoping for a winnable constituency.
The chancellor’s spad Hannah Galley is understood to be hoping to be selected having narrowly missed out on Calder Valley last year.
Most pressingly, party chairman Richard Holden is looking for a seat after his North West Durham constituency disappeared in the boundary review. He was said to be eyeing Billericay and Basildon or Skipton.
From further back George Osborne’s former adviser Rupert Harrison was selected last year for the new Bicester and Woodstock seat while Theresa May’s ex-spad Nick Timothy got Matt Hancock’s West Suffolk seat.
Since the election was called last week the party had to fill around 191 seats plus those for MPs who were standing down such as Michael Gove in Surrey Heath.
Party officials have gone into emergency by-election rules which means constituency associations are asked to pick from a shortlist of three imposed on them or just have a candidate imposed if the association is considered to be too small.
Tory chairman Richard Holden is a man looking for a seat (LBC)
The Independent understands that already Great Yarmouth party association “had a stand off” with Tory bosses at CCHQ over the shortlist sent to them but relented last night to select Mr Clark. Currently it is claimed that a similar row is taking place with Billericay and Basildon.
Outside special advisers, the party has refused to comment on anger that LBC presenter Iain Dale was shortlisted for Tunbridge Wells even though there are claims he had not gone through the vetting procedures or carried out the campaigning work expected for those to be allowed on the candidates list. Mr Dale though has unsuccessfully run for the Tories in previous elections.
Meanwhile, there are complaints that “real ideological Conservatives” like former Brexit minister Lord Frost are unable to apply for seats because it is claimed they are on the “deferred candidates list”. This means they cannot apply themselves.
A small committee with Downing Street political secretary James Forsyth, chief whip Simon Hart, chief of staff Liam Booth-Smith and a small group of others are said to be deciding who goes on the shortlists.
Tory former MEP David Campbell Bannerman, who is also on the deferred list, accused the party bosses of “operating a chumocracy.”
Mr Campbell Bannerman is chairman of the grassroots Conservative Democratic Organisation (CDO) seeking to reform the party structures and give members more of a say.
He said: “I am afraid this is not new but it is clear that a small clique is operating a chumocracy parachuting people they like into winnable seats. They are making it up as they go along.
“It is clear that the prime minister wants people who have been his special advisers or are close to him rather than people who have put int he work and are true ideological conservatives.”
He reflected warnings from elsewhere int he party that “decisions made now on a whim will leave us with MPs for the next 30 years”.
He added: “What is going on is really disrespectful of members and the activists the party needs to help us win the election.”
The row reflects similar anger in the Labour Party where Keir Starmer’s allies are being accused of a purge of the left and trying to parachute in his allies.
While Diane Abbott’s future remains uncertain and leftwinger Faiza Shaheen has been dropped, one of Sir Keir’s former advisers Uma Kumaran is apparently being lined up for Stratford and Bowe while another Chris Ward is being lined for for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven where defending MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle was dropped today because of a historic allegation.