Boris Johnson explodes after being called a liar in furious Brexit rant

Boris Johnson's eagerly anticipated new book, Unleashed, published tomorrow, will doubtless offering plenty more eye-opening insights into his time in Number 10.

By Ciaran McGrath, Senior News Reporter

Boris Johnson rejects claims that he is a 'liar'

Boris Johnson has clashed angrily with a BBC presenter after being accused of lying during the Brexit referendum campaign eight years ago, while highlighting what he saw as a collective failure to hold Remainers to account for untruths of their own.
Mr Johnson was put on the spot by presenter Matt Chorley during tense exchange of Radio 5 Live to promote the former Prime Minister’s new book, Unleashed, which is published tomorrow.
During the course of the interview, Mr Chorley asked Mr Johnson: “Lots of people think you are a liar. Are you a liar?”
Rejecting such a characterisation, Mr Johnson suggests Mr Chorley is referring to the controversial Vote Leave battle-bus, and specifically a slogan claiming the UK gave £350 million a week to Brussels.
Mr Chorley says: “You admit in your book that that was wrong” but Mr Johnson replies: "No, I don’t."
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Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson clashes with Matt Chorley on BBC Radio 5 Live yesterday (Image: BBC)

The former PM added: “I say that it was, in fact, an underestimate, because it was going to probably rise.”

Mr Chorley counters: “I’ve read your book and you say in the book that it was more like £170 million.”

His hackles rising, Mr Johnson said: "No, that is the net figure that the UK was sending to Brussels to be spent by the EU on projects in the EU.

“The rest was to be spent by the EU on projects in the UK with no control from the UK, right?”

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The famous Vote Leave battle bus, complete with slogan (Image: Getty)

Leaders vote in UK's EU referendum

Boris Johnson pictured with his then-wife Marina Wheeler during the 2016 Brexit referendum campaign (Image: Getty)
Mr Johnson then becomes visibly enraged as Mr Chorley saying “let’s not get too bogged down with this”, and replied: “You see, that's the problem.
"You accuse me of being a liar. You accused me of being a liar, and then when I actually come back with the truth, you don't want to hear it.
"And the truth is that those numbers were going to go up and, yes, they tried to hang all that stuff around us, the Remain campaign.
"Why don't you say that the Remain campaign were a bunch of liars for claiming that unemployment was going to go up by a million.

Former British PM Boris Johnson's memoir to be released on 10 October, London, United Kingdom - 08 O

Boris Johnson's new book is published tomorrow (Image: ANDY RAIN/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)

"Why don't you get them in. I bet nobody has ever accused Romain of being big fat Pants on Fire liars for the things that they said about what was going to happen to this economy after Brexit.”

The slogan on the side of the bus proclaimed: "We send the EU £350 million a week, let's fund our NHS instead.”

Critics argued that this figure was misleading, as it represented the gross amount sent to the EU without accounting for the rebate the UK received or the funds returned to the UK through EU programmes.

The suggestion that this money could directly fund the NHS was also seen as dubious, given that it oversimplified how government spending decisions are made.

This claim became a focal point of post-referendum debate, with many Remain supporters accusing the Leave campaign of misleading the public, while Leave campaigners defended the figure as highlighting the potential for redirecting EU contributions.

Vote Leave won the Referendum, in June 2016, triggering the process by which Britain quit the bloc. Mr Johnson was a leading light in the campaign and while he failed in his bid to become Tory leader in the immediate aftermath, he would eventually succeed Theresa May and become Prime Minister, winning the 2019 general election.

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