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She’s a devil, she’s an angel: she’s a pushy and whimsical ‘Princess Nut Nut’ or a steadfast friend who has long campaigned for animal welfare and feminist causes, reviving the faltering modernisation of British Conservatism. She’s modest and keeps out of the limelight – standing alongside staffers rather than in front of the glossy black door of No 10 when Boris Johnson returned to Downing Street after his December 2019 election victory – or she’s a siren in a high-stakes Game of Thrones, dubbed Cersei after the glamorous villainess, whip-cracking her way through Westminster and driving out loyalists.