Boris Johnson has criticised the UK government’s Brexit talks strategy, saying it lacks “guts” and suggested Donald Trump could do a better job.
The foreign secretary also took a swipe at Chancellor Philip Hammond, calling the Treasury “the heart of Remain”, in comments to a private dinner. He said the Brexit talks were heading for “meltdown” and Leave supporters may not get the deal they expected. Friends of Mr Johnson said they were disappointed he had been recorded. In the recording, obtained by Buzzfeed, Mr Johnson warns the UK could remain “locked in orbit around the EU” and claimed the Irish border issue – one of the main sticking points in talks with Brussels – had been allowed to dictate “the whole of our agenda”. “It’s so small and there are so few firms that actually use that border regularly, it’s just beyond belief that we’re allowing the tail to wag the dog in this way,” he said. The foreign secretary was apparently speaking to around 20 people in a private room after an Institute of Directors reception on Wednesday night. It follows a day of wrangling over the government’s “backstop” plan in the event of no customs deal being agreed before Brexit.
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Lord Howard tells Today that Brexit can succeed if the UK ‘holds its nerve’[/caption]


Analysis
By Chris Mason, BBC political correspondent The sentiments expressed might be unsurprising, but in colourful language and with devastating timing, Boris Johnson becomes the second cabinet minister in 24 hours to throw the prime minister’s authority into the pestle and mortar and pummel away. His friends say he’s disappointed the remarks were covertly recorded. But it’s not surprising they were. So first there was the Brexit Secretary hokey cokey: David Davis saying it is my way or the stairway (to the backbenches), and doing so in a way where, depending whether it was 10:00 or 11:00, he was either in the cabinet or about to be out. And now this. Johnsonian expression, including obligatory flourishes in Latin, which amounts to the same thing: a flexing of Brexiteer muscle in the direction of a prime minister desperate to hold her cabinet, her party and the country together. It’s one heck of a job.
- Russia’s importance had greatly diminished and its economy was now the size of Australia
- Russian President Vladimir Putin wanted to cause trouble and “upset people like us”
- The UK needed to engage with China, who he predicted would eventually take over as the world’s technology giant
- He would love to visit North Korea but has no immediate plans to do so