- Climate demo shuts down Hague motorway during police strike
- Man Utd lift mood by easing to victory at 10-man Southampton
- Ferrari's Leclerc claims fourth straight pole in Baku
- Russia, Ukraine swap 206 POWs in UAE-brokered deal
- 'Shame must change sides': France's mass rape plaintiff becomes feminist icon
- Fiji beat USA to reach Pacific Nations Cup final
- Guardiola convinced rivals eager for Man City sanctions
- Turkey buries activist shot in West Bank
- Uganda holds funeral for murdered Olympian Cheptegei
- Spanish star Juan Mata eager to kickstart career in Australia
- Cash-strapped Maldives says no need for IMF bailout
- France to bid final farewell to Olympics with Champs-Elysees parade
- Reynolds' Wrexham face Brady's Birmingham in 'Hollywood derby'
- Germany's parks plant a way forward on climate change
- Sauna masters mesmerise audiences at world championships
- N. Korea pledges deeper ties with Russia as security chief visits
- Turkey to bury activist shot in West Bank
- Tunisia fisherwomen battle inequality and climate change
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- 'Slave to fear': Ghosts of the Gulag haunt modern Russia
- Uganda to bury murdered Olympian Cheptegei
- Hiroyuki Sanada: actor and producer driving TV's 'Shogun'
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- Forced out of business in China, a bookseller turns the page
- Myanmar junta makes rare request for foreign aid to cope with deadly floods
- Hawaii wildfire tragedy was 'years in the making,' probe says
- Trump sharpens anti-migrant attacks as both candidates visit key states
- Fujimori 'never asked forgiveness': families of Peru massacre victims
- France's Garcia into Guadalajara semis as Bouzkova withdraws
- Former world No. 1 Osaka announces split with coach
- Celebrated ballerina Michaela DePrince dead at 29
- Europe searches for answers after early Solheim Cup drubbing
- Alcaraz gives Spain Davis delight as Australia, United States and Germany also qualify
- Biden, Starmer discuss Ukraine missiles as Russia tensions mount
- Brazil judge seizes $3 million from Musk to pay X fines
- No.1 Korda leads USA to 6-2 edge over Europe at Solheim Cup
- Tesla truck fire took 190,000 liters of water to extinguish
- Pope says anti-immigrant Trump and abortion-rights advocate Harris 'against life'
- Livingstone levels T20 series for England against Australia
- Boeing 'ran out of time' on Starliner: astronaut stuck on ISS
- Adeyemi stars as Dortmund beat Heidenheim
- UN official says Sudan IDP women in desperate need of protection
- Unbeaten Duplantis reigns supreme, Alfred dominates Richardson
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- Alfred scorches past Richardson to Diamond League 100m finals win
- Golf superstar Woods undergoes new back surgery
- Australia smash England for 193 in 2nd T20
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- Paulino wins Diamond League 400m, McLaughlin-Levrone coasts in invitational race
- Tagovailoa urged to retire after latest concussion
Carrie Johnson: Tory activist faces unwelcome limelight
Carrie Johnson, the wife of Britain's prime minister, is an experienced political operative in her own right who has been thrust from the shadows as allegations of sleaze and scandal envelop Downing Street.
The 33-year-old former head of communications for the Conservative party has kept a low public profile since Boris Johnson entered Number 10 in 2019.
She has given no interviews, and only appeared by Johnson's side at marquee events such as international summits and last October's annual Tory conference.
But she has increasingly been accused of holding too much sway over issues close to her heart -- especially the environment and animal rights -- and over staff appointments.
Much of the offensive has come from the prime minister's embittered former chief aide, Dominic Cummings, and has taken on new prominence in a new biography by Michael Ashcroft.
"My book shows Carrie's behaviour is preventing the prime minister leading Britain as effectively as the voters deserve," Ashcroft, a former deputy chairman of the Conservatives, wrote last weekend.
Supporters say the charges smack of sexism, and political opponents of Johnson say he and not his wife must be held to account.
After the first instalment of Ashcroft's book was published in the Mail on Sunday newspaper, her spokeswoman dismissed the claims as part of a smear campaign against the couple by "bitter ex-officials".
Carrie Johnson, she said, was a "private individual who plays no role in government".
- Off-limits? -
Most recently, the Johnsons have been accused of attending, or even hosting, some of the lockdown-breaking parties under police investigation at Downing Street.
Both are expected to face questioning from London's Metropolitan Police force.
That comes on top of a Caribbean holiday and the redecoration of the Downing Street flat funded by rich backers, along with a controversy about the evacuation from Kabul of pets sheltered by a British former soldier being allegedly prioritised over people.
"The Mustique holiday, Downing Street wallpaper, Afghan dogs, at least one Downing Street party... Carrie Johnson's name keeps coming up in relation to all these, sometimes unfairly, sometimes not," Paul Goodman, editor at the influential blog ConservativeHome, has noted.
Others have rallied to her defence, including Health Secretary Sajid Javid, who employed her as a special adviser in 2016. He branded her treatment unfair, "undignified" and rooted in sexism.
"I think the partners of politicians should be off-limits," he said.
However, Cummings has claimed she wanted to "get rid" of him from Number 10, and alleged she tried "to change a whole bunch of different appointments".
Ash Sarker, from the left-wing outlet Novara Media, agreed some of the criticisms were "motivated by misogyny".
"But she is also a political operator in her own right... and we don't have the normal methods of holding her accountable," she told Sky News.
- Wed in secret -
Born Carrie Symonds, she is the daughter of the co-founder of The Independent newspaper and a former lawyer. She grew up in southwest London and attended a private school before studying theatre and art history at university.
She began working for the Conservatives in 2010, in marketing, and first came into contact with Johnson working on his 2012 re-election campaign for London mayor.
She then held various jobs in politics and at Tory party headquarters, including director of communications, but left that role in 2018 after a reported dispute over her expenses.
She joined the marketing team at conservation group Oceana, before moving to a role at The Aspinall Foundation, an animal welfare charity.
The Johnsons reportedly began dating in 2018 when the prime minister, now 57, was still married to his second wife.
When he succeeded Theresa May in July 2019, Carrie Symonds looked on with staff as he became the first British prime minister since Edward Heath in 1970 to take office without a spouse by his side.
She initially remained living elsewhere.
But the couple announced their engagement in early 2020, once his divorce was finalised, and wed in a "secret ceremony" in May last year.
In between, the couple's first child together, Boris Johnson's sixth, was born in April 2020, soon after he recovered from Covid.
The couple named him Wilfred. A baby girl called Romy followed in December.
The Johnsons own a rescue dog, called Dilyn, who also stands accused of varying degrees of misbehaviour in Downing Street.
L.Carrico--PC