The Southland Times

Bye bye Boris

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson has agreed to resign, his office said last night, ending an unpreceden­ted political crisis over his future that has paralysed Britain’s Government.

An official in Johnson’s Downing Street office confirmed the prime minister would announce his resignatio­n later. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the announceme­nt had not yet been made.

Johnson, 58, had rebuffed calls by his Cabinet to step down in the wake of ethics scandals. He gave in after more than 50 ministers quit his government and told him to go.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Johnson would stay in office while the Conservati­ve Party chooses a new leader, who will replace him as prime minister.

Minutes before the news broke, Treasury chief Nadhim Zahawi called on Johnson to resign just 36 hours after the PM put him in the job, while another newly appointed Cabinet minister quit her post.

Zahawi said Johnson knew ‘‘the right thing to do’’ was to ‘‘go now’’.

Zahawi was appointed on Wednesday (NZ time) to replace Rishi Sunak, who resigned saying he could no longer support Johnson after a series of ethics scandals.

Education Secretary Michelle Donelan, who was also appointed this week following the resignatio­n of her predecesso­r, announced her resignatio­n last night.

Johnson had rejected clamours for his resignatio­n, digging in his heels even as dozens of officials quit and previously loyal allies urged him to go after yet another scandal engulfed his leadership.

A group of Johnson’s most trusted Cabinet ministers visited him at his office in Downing Street on Wednesday, telling him to stand down after losing the trust of his party. But Johnson instead opted to fight for his political career and fired one of the Cabinet officials, Michael Gove, British media reported yesterday.

It is rare for a prime minister to cling on to office in the face of this much pressure from his Cabinet colleagues. The Guardian’s front page yesterday called him ‘‘Desperate, deluded’’.

‘‘He’s breached the trust that was put in him. He needs to recognise that he no longer has the moral authority to lead. And for him, it’s over,’’ Scottish National Party leader Ian Blackford said.

Johnson was known for his knack for wiggling out of tight spots. He remained in power despite allegation­s he was too close to party donors, that he protected supporters from bullying and corruption allegation­s, and that he misled Parliament and was dishonest to the public about government office parties that broke Covid lockdown rules.

But recent disclosure­s that Johnson knew about sexual misconduct allegation­s against Chris Pincher, a Conservati­ve lawmaker, before he promoted the man to a senior position turned out to be the last straw. Last week, Pincher resigned as deputy chief whip after complaints he groped two men at a private club.

That triggered a series of reports about past allegation­s levelled against Pincher – and shifting explanatio­ns from the government about what Johnson knew when he tapped him for a senior job enforcing party discipline.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid and Treasury’s Sunak resigned within minutes of each other on Wednesday over the scandal.

The two Cabinet heavyweigh­ts were responsibl­e for tackling two of the biggest issues facing Britain — the cost-of-living crisis and Covid-19.

 ?? AP ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson outside 10 Downing Street hours before it was announced he will resign as Conservati­ve Party leader.
AP British Prime Minister Boris Johnson outside 10 Downing Street hours before it was announced he will resign as Conservati­ve Party leader.

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