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Cameron’s Threats and Political Maneuvering in Brexit Battle: Johnson Reveals All


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In his memoir *Unleashed*, Boris Johnson has revealed startling details about the intense political battles leading up to the 2016 EU referendum, including an explosive threat from David Cameron. According to Johnson, Cameron, the then-Prime Minister, threatened to “f---” him up "forever" if he supported the Leave campaign. This bold allegation adds a new layer to the political drama that engulfed the Conservative Party during the Brexit crisis.

 

Johnson claims that Cameron, desperate to keep the UK in the European Union, attempted to sway him with promises of a top position in the Cabinet if he backed the Remain campaign. During a tennis match, Cameron reportedly urged Johnson, “Come on – go with the campaign to stay in and I’ll make sure you get a top-five job in the Cabinet.” However, Cameron's approach wasn’t purely conciliatory. Johnson recounts a phone conversation where Cameron's tone turned threatening, warning him of the dire consequences of backing Brexit.

 

“The PM had rung me one evening at City Hall, urging me to make up my mind,” Johnson wrote. “I was torn, I said. I wanted to back him, but over the years I had written hundreds if not thousands of articles attacking the undemocratic features of the EU. I felt I had to be consistent.”

 

According to Johnson, Cameron was furious at his indecision, emphasizing the national stakes of the referendum. “'This isn’t about articles!' he spluttered. 'It’s about… the future of the country!'” But when Johnson admitted he was leaning toward voting Leave, Cameron’s response was severe. “‘If you do that,’ he said – and these were his exact words – ‘I will f--- you up for ever.’”

 

Johnson admitted that Cameron’s threat left an impression. He pondered the implications of being targeted by a Prime Minister with the power and resources of the government at his disposal. “Did I want to be f---ed up? For ever? By a prime minister equipped with all the f---ing-up tools available to a modern government, and thousands of f---er-uppers just waiting to do his bidding?” Johnson mused in his memoir. At the time, with polls indicating that the Leave campaign was likely to lose, Johnson recalled feeling the pressure as a potential defeat could brand Brexit supporters as political pariahs. “Once we lost the failed and defeated Leavers would of course be crushed like bugs: dismissed as Powellite cranks and misfits who had been rejected by the people.”

 

But the revelations don’t stop at Cameron. Johnson also alleges that Philip Hammond, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, suggested overthrowing Theresa May following her disastrous performance in the 2017 general election, which saw the Conservative Party lose its parliamentary majority. Johnson wrote that Hammond, despite his typically reserved demeanor, approached him with a radical proposal in the early hours of the morning.

 

“He thought it was all very unfortunate but Theresa’s goose was cooked. She would have to go sooner or later, and it might as well be now,” Johnson wrote of his conversation with Hammond. The Chancellor reportedly proposed a Hammond-Johnson partnership, where Johnson would become Prime Minister and Hammond would continue as his "economic co-pilot."

 

Johnson admits he briefly considered the offer but ultimately rejected it. “I thought about it briefly, as dawn started to break, and then said no,” he wrote.

 

These allegations shed light on the extraordinary levels of political maneuvering and personal ambition that characterized the Brexit era. Johnson’s memoir paints a vivid picture of a divided Conservative Party, with key figures like Cameron and Hammond plotting behind the scenes to maintain power or shape the future direction of the country.

 

A spokesman for David Cameron declined to comment on the claims, while Philip Hammond has yet to respond publicly. Regardless of the response, Johnson’s revelations are bound to reignite debate over the internal power struggles that shaped one of the most tumultuous periods in modern British political history.

 

Based on a report from: Daily Telegraph 2024-10-01

 

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  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Social Media said:

'It’s about… the future of the country!'

Really?  Or was it about the future of David Cameron's ego.

  • Agree 1
Posted

Good to see that Boris stood strong for the benefit of country, leading the extrication from the stifling tentacles of the corrupt EU's federalist project. 

 

Surely a knighthood awaits. 

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Posted

Cameron should have known that his re negotiation he came back with was not going to convince the people and he could not get over it, Boris summed it up very well and in a more non party, non brexit view it just shows what poor bunch of politicians the UK has had recently.

Boris was always a bit of a scallywag but the Tories were wrong to get rid of him and just see where it has got them, I would not vote for them I would vote for Reform, we need a breath of fresh air and change from what is currently on offer.

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Posted

Is it any wonder that the UK is in the state it is, having suffered from the mismanagement of these arrogant, egoistical, inept fools over the past 14 years.

 

Is there no end to the amount of incriminating evidence?

Posted

Anyone who believed a word that the disgraced former PM Johnson said or wrote deserved all the sh*t that the fat liar heaped upon them.

Trouble is that the saner sections of society were equally affected.

Also, if Deform is the answer then we're asking the wrong question.

  • Haha 1
Posted
13 hours ago, Social Media said:

. I felt I had to be consistent.”

Consistency is not a word most people would associate with Johnson. 

 

13 hours ago, Social Media said:

According to Johnson, Cameron, the then-Prime Minister, threatened to “f---” him up "forever"

 

Cameron clearly learnt from the time Johnson helped his friend Darius Guppy beat up a journalist who wrote something Guppy didn't like. 

  • Like 1
Posted
42 minutes ago, RayC said:

Is it any wonder that the UK is in the state it is, having suffered from the mismanagement of these arrogant, egoistical, inept fools over the past 14 years.

 

Is there no end to the amount of incriminating evidence?

 

Make that 14 a 34 and I might actually agree with you for a change.

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Posted

I wonder if elsewhere in BJ's memoir he'll come clean about his gross negligence in his handling of COVID that directly led to the deaths of tens of thousands of people?  Or about all of the obscene corruption that happened during that time?  Or how many illegal parties he actually had during that time?

 

I won't be bothering to buy the memoir to find out of course.

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