From Munira Mizra To Malala: The Five Women Who Have Shaped Boris Johnson’s Life

To mark International Women’s Day, Grazia asked the Prime Minister to nominate the five women who have influenced and inspired him the most... and one of them just quit her job over his latest controversial comment.

Boris Johnson Munira Mizra

by Phoebe Parke |
Updated on

Two years ago in the midst of Brexit, a survey of our readers told us that you were talking about – and interested in – politics more than ever before.

We started a regular Westminster column to address the matter, asking a different female MP each week to discuss issues impacting British women today. But, ultimately, the person with the most significant ability to shape our future is the Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

So to mark International Women’s Day on 8 March, Grazia asked the Prime Minister to nominate the five women who have influenced and inspired him the most. Do his answers reveal the psyche of the man leading our country? Read on – we would love to hear your views…

The first woman the Prime Minister nominated, Malala, was someone he met in 2014 when he was Mayor of London. ‘She was so brave, so right and so luminously idealistic that I could see I was in the presence of a modern-day saint,’ Johnson wrote in Grazia of the schoolgirl who defied the Taliban and campaigned for the right for girls to go to school.

The second, Munira Mirza, was another woman from his mayoral days – Mirza was the deputy Mayor for Culture and recently quit her role as Director of the Policy Unit in Number 10 after Johnson attempted to associate Keir Starmer with the failure to prosecute the child abuser Jimmy Savile.

'Munira Mirza and I started working together 12 years ago, and I rapidly realised that she was extraordinary,' the Prime Minister wrote. 'She is young, Asian, state-educated and of Oldham Muslim origins.

'She has a background in the arts and wrote a PhD on some cultural theme before becoming, in 2008, London’s Deputy Mayor for Culture – a notoriously prickly world. She soon won them over. The arts world trusts and likes her partly because – in a way that simply eludes me – Munira is capable of being hip, cool, groovy and generally on trend,' he praised her.

'Yet, I don’t think I have ever met anyone so efficient, and with such a horror of wasting taxpayers’ money. She hates cant; she hates frippery; she hates political correctness. She has, all told, the most powerful nonsense-detector I have ever seen. That is why I am so proud today that she is Director of the Policy unit in Number 10,' he said at the time.

'This is a Government that must be focused on delivery. We are on a mission to deliver huge improvements in health care – 40 new hospitals, 50,000 more nurses. We are here to fight crime, with 20,000 more police. We are here to defeat homelessness with a vast and beautiful programme of home ownership. To do all this we need a head of policy sharp and ruthless enough to take on the vested interests. We need someone to crack the knout and set the pace – and that person is Munira.'

The third is his grandmother, known to her grandchildren as ‘Granny Butter’. She was an Oxford graduate who lived on a rain-lashed Exmoor hill farm – yet for her ‘the sun was always shining… and everything was pretty well marvellous.’

The fourth, Johnson described as a proto-Brexiteer: Boudicca. ‘What a woman…. The Romans have just beaten her up, raped her daughters and seized her kingdom. And what does she do? She attacks.’

And the fifth? Well, the Prime Minister appeared to deliberate on this one… could it be the Queen? Or the former prime minister Margaret Thatcher? No – instead, he chose a British artist who ‘wrote what is surely one of the world’s greatest ever pop songs’: Kate Bush.

Gallery

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia

What's Up In Westminster1 of 14

Jess Phillips: 'I Want Everyone In The Country To Know They Have The Power To Change The Law'

Labour MP Jess Phillips, known for her tenacity and unflinching speeches.

What's Up In Westminster2 of 14

Dawn Butler: 'Black History Is Not Just For October'

Shadow Women and Equalities Minster, Dawn Butler, explains why Boris Johnson could learn a thing or two this Black History Month.

Whats Up In Westminster3 of 14

Harriet Harman: 'We Need To Stop Sexual Liberation Being Used As A Defence For Men Killing Women'

Labour's Harriet Harman, the longest-serving female MP, reveals her frustration with both the fight for equality and, of course, Brexit

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)4 of 14

Diane Abbott: 'I Get Rape And Death Threats Every Day'

Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott on how Westminster feels like a school playground right now, and why young people need better sex education

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)5 of 14

Esther McVey: 'My Family Are Anxious At The Thought Of Me Being Trolled As The Next Prime Minister'

Tory leadership hopeful Esther Mcvey tells us why she wants to lead the country, despite the potential pitfalls

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)6 of 14

Tulip Siddiq: I've Had A Woman Say To Me 'You Can't Be A Mother And An MP'

MP Tulip Siddiq, 36, made history when she delayed her C-section to vote on Brexit. She tells Gaby Hinsliff about having no maternity leave, balancing constituents' and kids' needs and trying to encourage more women into politics

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)7 of 14

Diana Johnson: 'People Don't Realise We Need New Abortion Laws In England And Wales'

It's not right that women in this country can still go to prison for terminating a pregnancy, says Labour MP Diana Johnson

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)8 of 14

Rachel Johnson: 'I Want To Get Stuck In - I Don't Want To Be Used As 'Sister Of Boris'

Journalist Rachel Johnson wants to be our next Member of the European Parliament - and unlike her famous brother, she's anti-Brexit

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)9 of 14

Rebecca Long-Bailey: 'I'm One Of Only Three Women At The Brexit Talks Table'

The Labour MP and Shadow Business Secretary urges new action to tackle the climate crises

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)10 of 14

Jess Phillips: 'Every Woman I Know Has Suffered Violence, Myself Included'

That's why Labour MP Jess Phillips is tackling domestic violence legislation this week - even amidst the chaos of Brexit

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)11 of 14

Luciana Berger: 'There's Still Such An Imbalance In How We Address Mental Health'

Luciana Berger, Independent MP, is worried that despite the warm words, mental health care is still not being taken seriously

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)12 of 14

Sarah Wollaston: 'My Anti-Stalking Law Must Not Be Delayed By Brexit'

Newly Independent (formerly Conservative) MP Sarah Wollaston talks about stalking, second referendum and... riding her tandem

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)13 of 14

Rushanara Ali: 'Women have every right to be in politics'

Bethnal Green MP Rushanara Ali is fighting to make housing safer, and enters the debate about whether ISIS brides should be allowed to return to the UK.

Whats Up In Westminster - Grazia (Slider)14 of 14

Heidi Allen: 'Speaking About My Abortion In The Commons Was One Of The Hardest Thing I've Done'

Heidi Allen, Lib Dem MP for South Cambridgeshire, is determined to reform Universal Credit and speak up for people whose voices can't be heard.

READ MORE: Can The Queen Make Boris Johnson Resign?

These Are The Best Memes And Reactions To Sue Gray's Downing Street Investigation

The Moment Tory MP David Davis Tells Boris Johnson To His Face That It's Time To Resign

Of All The Excuses For Boris Johnson’s Failings, Blaming An 8-Month Pregnant Carrie For Moving Out When He Got Covid Is Obscene

Just so you know, whilst we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website, we never allow this to influence product selections - read why you should trust us