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Theresa May: I don't want a cabinet of 'yes men' Theresa May: Boris Johnson isn't undermining me
(about 3 hours later)
Theresa May has brushed off questions about Boris Johnson's recent Brexit comments - saying she does not want to be surrounded by "yes men". Theresa May says she has not been undermined by Boris Johnson's recent interventions on Brexit, saying she does not just want "yes men" in her cabinet.
The prime minister told BBC Breakfast "leadership is about ensuring you have a team... of different voices around the table so you can discuss matters". The prime minister said the foreign secretary's vision of Brexit reflected the government's approach.
Mrs May was speaking ahead of a day in which the foreign secretary is due to deliver his key conference speech. "This isn't about an individual personality, it's about how we can deliver for people," she added.
It comes after Mr Johnson set out his Brexit "red lines" at the weekend. Some MPs have called for Mr Johnson to be fired over his comments.
Mrs May has been shown the foreign secretary's speech and is understood to be happy with it, the BBC's assistant political editor Norman Smith said. Asked what it would take for him to be sacked, the PM told BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg that strong leadership involved "having a range of voices sitting around the table".
Sources say the speech is 100% loyal to the prime minister and the Brexit agenda set out in her Florence speech last month, he added. Responding to some Tory figures' concerns she was being undermined by the foreign secretary, she said: "It doesn't undermine what I'm doing at all."
Asked whether there were any red lines which Mr Johnson himself should not cross, Mrs May told Breakfast: "I don't set red lines. Everybody uses this phrase 'red lines'. I don't set those sort of red lines. Mr Johnson, who addressed the Conservative Party conference on Tuesday, set out his Brexit "red lines" at the weekend, triggering anger from some colleagues and accusations that he was targeting Mrs May's job.
But Mrs May played down any differences with the government's position.
"If you look at the issues Boris has been talking about they reflect the position we've taken in the Florence speech, setting out a vision of what this country can be doing in terms of its partnership with Europe in the future," she said.
Asked whether his interventions made her "cross", she replied: "Crucially, there's a lot of talk about Boris's job or this job or that job inside the cabinet.
"Actually what people are concerned about - they don't want us to be thinking about our jobs they want us to be thinking about their jobs and their futures.
"What government is for is about delivering for the public. That's where our focus must be."
In his much-anticipated speech in Manchester, Mr Johnson said it was time to "let the British lion roar" as he called for Brexit to be a moment of national renewal.
He also praised Theresa May's "steadfast" leadership over Europe and insisted the whole cabinet was united behind her aim of getting a "great Brexit deal".
In their speeches, International Trade Secretary Liam Fox and Brexit Secretary David Davis both called for an end to pessimism over the UK's departure from the EU.
May's 'mission'
Mrs May has faced repeated questions about her leadership during the conference, having seen the Conservatives lose their Commons majority in June's general election.
She insisted she had the authority and ideas to improve the Tories' standing - and that her party was still setting the political agenda, adding that she had "listened" to voters' concerns on tuition fees and home ownership.
And she repeatedly stressed her "mission" in government, as set out when she took office, "to ensure that we no longer see people in this country that feel left behind".
Earlier during a round of media interviews the PM was asked by BBC Breakfast whether there were any "red lines" which Mr Johnson himself should not cross.
"I don't set red lines. Everybody uses this phrase 'red lines'. I don't set those sort of red lines," she told BBC Breakfast.
"All I would say is actually I think leadership is about ensuring you have a team of people who aren't yes men, but a team of people of different voices around the table, so you can discuss matters, come to an agreement and then put that government view forward, and that's exactly what we've done.""All I would say is actually I think leadership is about ensuring you have a team of people who aren't yes men, but a team of people of different voices around the table, so you can discuss matters, come to an agreement and then put that government view forward, and that's exactly what we've done."
Speaking later on BBC Radio 4's Today, Mrs May said the foreign secretary and the rest of the cabinet were united behind her Brexit strategy, insisting that European leaders knew what the UK wanted and that her Florence speech had "changed the dial". On BBC Radio 4's Today, Mrs May said the foreign secretary and the rest of the cabinet were united behind her Brexit strategy, insisting that European leaders knew what the UK wanted and that her Florence speech had "changed the dial".
"What I am very clear about is of course the prime minister is in charge," she said."What I am very clear about is of course the prime minister is in charge," she said.
Mrs May said the foreign secretary would be talking about his vision for a "global Britain" after Brexit in his speech later and she supported that.
On Europe, she said she backed an implementation period of about two years after the UK leaves in March 2019 but suggested that some changes could come into effect earlier if appropriate.
On her own future, she said was committed to delivering the "mission of government", insisting that there was "a long term job to be done here".
'Troublemaker''Troublemaker'
She acknowledged that her message "did not come across in the general election" as she would have wanted and it was apparent the concerns of the British people were "more keenly felt" than people had thought.She acknowledged that her message "did not come across in the general election" as she would have wanted and it was apparent the concerns of the British people were "more keenly felt" than people had thought.
Mrs May said the election had shown that many people felt "left behind and ignored" but she insisted that change would not happen overnight and no "great phrase" would transform things.Mrs May said the election had shown that many people felt "left behind and ignored" but she insisted that change would not happen overnight and no "great phrase" would transform things.
"I am very clear about the problems in society but I am very clear as a politician and particularly as prime minister, we owe it to people to show how we can deliver and resolve those as politicians.
"There is no simple idea that is going to change all of these. It will take action in a number of areas."
In the run-up to Mr Johnson's speech, pro-Remain Tory MP and former business minister Anna Soubry told Channel 4 News that she had asked the foreign secretary to resign over the weekend, describing him a "troublemaker".In the run-up to Mr Johnson's speech, pro-Remain Tory MP and former business minister Anna Soubry told Channel 4 News that she had asked the foreign secretary to resign over the weekend, describing him a "troublemaker".
Speaking ahead of his own conference speech, International Trade Secretary Liam Fox told BBC Radio 4's The World at One: "I think it's easier if we are all on a very strict script, it's very clear that the prime minister is in charge of this process." Speaking ahead of his own conference speech, in which he called for greater optimism about Brexit, International Trade Secretary Liam Fox told BBC Radio 4's The World at One: "I think it's easier if we are all on a very strict script, it's very clear that the prime minister is in charge of this process."
Also on the third day of the Conservative conference in Manchester, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt promised 5,000 new training places for nurses while International Development Secretary Priti Patel announced new conditions on foreign aid spending to prevent "fat cats" from monopolising contracts.
And a proposed ban on the sale of acids to under-18s was outlined by Home Secretary Amber Rudd.