Boris Johnson Boasts He Can Drink 'An Awful Lot' At Lunch And Still Work Well

Boris Is Pretty Proud About How Much He Can Drink At Lunch
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London Mayor Boris Johnson enjoys a pint of Greene King's Abbot Ale at the King's Arms pub on Tooley St in London, to celebrate National Cask Ale Week and to urge people to support their local pub.
Geoff Caddick/PA Archive

Boris Johnson has boasted that he can "drink an awful lot at lunch" and still work well, but insisted he is now a much more serious politician than when he was last an MP.

The London Mayor, who is standing next year for the Tory safe seat of Uxbridge, dismissed suggestions in an interview with the Radio Times that he had been too "flakey" as a Tory front-bench spokesman, claiming that he "did pretty well" in at least one of his posts.

"We were in opposition when Blair was absolutely at the height of his game," he said. "I did have a variety of shadow ministerial posts, and one of them at least, I think, I did pretty well."

Johnson, who has repeatedly denied wanting David Cameron's job, attempted to show off his credentials for ministerial office, saying: "The experience of running London for six or seven years has shown me what you have to do to get things done, and the energy and the application you have to put into it."

The Mayor, who has written a book about Winston Churchill, admitted that he was effectively inviting critics to note the "superficial, absurd points of comparison that this buffoon wants us to draw out" between him and the wartime leader.

Johnson paid tribute to Churchill's ability to drink from breakfast till dinner and still get on with his job: "I mean, what was he on? How did he do it? He was incredible," the London Mayor said. "I was trying to think of somebody in our profession that could do that still… I mean, I can drink an awful lot at lunch and then write very fluently and fast. But if I drink at dinner, it just peters off."

The London Mayor has himself been accused of not putting the hours in at City Hall. Labour assembly member Len Duvall told the Huffington Post UK that "the rules do not apply" to Johnson, adding: "He has been coming in only three days a week. You're really on duty for 24 hours though."

According to Sonia Purnell, who wrote a biography about the Mayor, Johnson had been only working three days in order to have the time to write his book about Winston Churchill. "He has been managing to find time," she said.

The Mayor was forced to admit that he sometimes does not "go in" to work on Fridays, but stressed that he did not work from home, after being accused of never coming in at all by his predecessor Ken Livingstone. He reportedly told aides that he would unofficially work part-time after the Olympics.

9 Times Boris Johnson Denied Prime Ministerial/Leadership Ambitions
July 2003: "I'm more likely to be decapitated by a frisbee"(01 of07)
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When asked by school pupils in his Henley consistency if he wanted to be Prime Minister, Johnson said: "I have as much chance of becoming Prime Minister as of being decapitated by a frisbee or of finding Elvis."
June 2004: "I'm more likely to find Elvis on Mars"(02 of07)
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"My chances of being PM are about as good as the chances of finding Elvis on Mars, or my being reincarnated as an olive," he said in 2004.
October 2011: "I really don't want to do anything else"(03 of07)
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Speaking to ITV at the Tory party conference, Johnson insisted that he did not expect to do "another big job in politics" after leaving City Hall, adding: "What I want is to get re-elected."
January 2012: "Of course not, I count Dave as a friend" (04 of07)
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May 2012: "I'll be serving out my term as mayor"(05 of07)
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As he fought to be re-elected Mayor of London, Johnson brushed aside speculation by insisting his mind would be focused on serving out his second term.
May 2013: "Dave will win 2015"(06 of07)
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Goaded by Cameron's former top spin doctor Andy Coulson, Johnson insisted he did not want the Prime Minister to "fail miserably" so he could "ride in on his bike and save party and country" as, he said, Cameron would go on to win.
March 2013: "It's not going to happen"(07 of07)
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Asked in a documentary about whether he wanted to be Prime Minister, Johnson gave his most teasing answer yet, responding. "Obviously if the ball came loose from the back of the scrum – which it won’t— it would be a great, great thing to have a crack at it."But, he added: "It’s not going to happen.”