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All together, Boris Johnson's old allies have decided to promote his return to power following a strategy similar to the one that Jeremy Corbyn launched as Labor leader, thanks to the support of the bases.

The

Tory

momentum

has been dubbed the Conservative Democratic Organization (CDO) and is headed by former party treasurer

Peter Cruddas

,

elevated to the House of Lords by Johnson himself in 2020.

As The Guardian

reveals

, the new internal current of the Conservatives has another lord,

Stephen Greenhalgh

, who was deputy mayor of London with Johnson as vice president.

Former Home Secretary

Priti Patel

and former Culture Secretary

Nadine Dorries

-both ousted by Rishi Sunak- have given their support to the new organisation, which aims to redefine the rules by which the party operates and reopen the interminable war in the process. of the

Tories

.

"Our bases are the heart and soul of our party," Patel herself has written in giving her support to the campaign.

The CDO proposes to rescue the slogan

Take back control

, this time to vindicate the ability of the bases to

control

the party against the apparatus that allowed the election of Rishi Sunak as conservative leader with the vote of the deputies but without counting the 172,000 militants ( the same ones who two months before elected Liz Truss and led to her

disastrous 45-day term

).

Even before completing his first 100 days in Downing Street, Sunak has become a favorite target of Johnson allies such as Nadine Dories, who has accused the

premier

of "throwing three years of progressive

Tory

government politics down the drain. " .

The conservative press, led by

The Daily Mail

,

began to openly question Sunak's economic creed and shift him towards the political center

.

"Johnson could be back unless Sunak shows he's farsighted," warns newspaper columnist

Anne McElvoy

, echoing the growing discontent.

return announced

Johnson has already threatened to return after the fiasco of his successor Liz Truss, but decided not to fight Sunak due to

pressure from his own deputies

.

"I am sure that Cincinnatus will return to Downing Street at some point this year," predicts Lord Stephen Greenhalgh.

The news about Johnson's hypothetical return have, however, raised blisters among his own deputies.

"God help us!" ex-Brexit minister

David Davis

has proclaimed .

Others have directly questioned the background of Boris's

godfather

, former banker

Peter Cruddas

, who had to resign as Conservative Party treasurer in 2012 when

The Sunday Times

revealed that he came to pay bills - from 120,000 to 280,000 euros - for guaranteeing the " Shortcut" to

David Cameron

.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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