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Friday 14 June 2019 4:39 pm

Boris Johnson shirks Channel 4 TV debate but is ‘more than happy’ to appear on BBC version

By: Alexandra Rogers

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Boris Johnson is the frontrunner in the race with most MPs support

Boris Johnson has said he will not attend Channel 4’s TV debate on Sunday, despite pressure from other candidates in the race to replace Theresa May as Prime Minister.

The former foreign secretary has, however, confirmed that he will take part in the BBC’s debate on Tuesday night.

Read more: You’re hired: Lord Sugar backs Boris Johnson to be the next PM

Johnson was criticised by his fellow five candidates, who issued a joint-statement outlining the importance of the contenders to face public scrutiny.

Jeremy Hunt, Michael Gove, Dominic Raab, Sajid Javid, Rory Stewart and Matt Hancock – who has since pulled out of the race – said: “The next Conservative leader, and Prime Minister, will have the crucial task of uniting Britain behind a new vision – not only to deliver Brexit, but to define what comes next.

“This leadership contest provides an important opportunity to debate, to shape and to define the ideas which will underpin those competing visions. That is why we are committed to taking part in the Channel 4 televised debates this Sunday and the BBC programme next Tuesday.”

Read more: Conservative leadership rivals turn on Boris Johnson’s tax cut plans

Johnson, who won 114 votes in the first round earlier this week, implied he would skip Channel 4’s debate but said he was “more than happy” to have a “sensible grown-up debate” on the BBC.

Read more

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Andy Burnham campaigns to be Labour leader, 2015.

“I think it’s important we have a sensible, grown up debate,” he told the BBC. “My own observation is that in the past, when you’ve had loads of candidates it can be slightly cacophonous.

“And I think the public have had quite a lot of blue-on-blue action frankly over the last three years. We don’t necessarily need a lot more of that.

“And so what I think the best solution would be is to have a debate on what we all have to offer the country.”

He added: “And the best time to do that, I think, would be after the second ballot on Tuesday. And the best forum is the proposed BBC debate. I think that’s a good idea.”

Read more: Tory leadership hopeful Rory Stewart: I can beat Boris and I will stick up for Canada

Johnson’s decision attracted criticism from rival candidate Jeremy Hunt, who said: “We can only have that debate if our frontrunner in this campaign is a little bit braver in terms of getting out into the media and actually engaging in the TV debates,” he said.

“What would Churchill say if someone who wants to be prime minister of the United Kingdom is hiding away from the media, not taking part in these big occasions?”

Read more

Why English literature graduates shouldn’t be Prime Minister

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