Bangkok Post

3 Tories withdraw support for Johnson

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LONDON: Three lawmakers from Britain’s governing Conservati­ves pulled their support for Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday over a damning report that detailed a series of alcoholfue­lled parties at 10 Downing Street that broke Covid-19 lockdown rules.

A day after the report was published, describing a boozy culture at his Downing Street office during lockdowns, Conservati­ve lawmakers John Baron, David Simmonds and Stephen Hammond said they could no longer support the prime minister.

Their voices add to a growing list of Conservati­ve lawmakers who have called for Mr Johnson to resign over what has been dubbed “partygate”, despite the prime minister’s repeated apologies, although there are still not enough to prompt a confidence vote.

Mr Baron, first elected in 2001, said he was withdrawin­g his support because he believed Mr Johnson had “knowingly” misled parliament — a charge the prime minister denies but which is being investigat­ed by a parliament­ary committee.

“Given the scale of rule-breaking in No.10, I cannot accept that the prime minister was unaware. Therefore his repeated assurances in parliament that there was no rule-breaking is simply not credible,” he said in a statement.

“Having always said I would consider all the available evidence before deciding, I’m afraid the prime minister no longer enjoys my support — I can no longer give him the benefit of the doubt.”

Mr Simmonds, who was elected in 2019, said Mr Johnson had lost the confidence of the public. “Accordingl­y it is time for him to step down so that new leadership can take forward the important work of the government,” he said in a statement.

More than 15 Conservati­ve lawmakers have publicly called for Mr Johnson to quit since the reports of lockdown-breaking parties began to drip into the media. But Mr Johnson has refused, saying he still has work to do in government.

To trigger a confidence vote in Mr Johnson’s leadership, 54 Conservati­ve lawmakers in parliament must write letters calling for one to the chairman of the party’s 1922 Committee. Former minister Hammond said he had submitted a letter.

The letters are confidenti­al, so the chairman is the only person who knows how many have actually been submitted.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson holds a news conference at Downing Street in London on Wednesday in response to the publicatio­n of a report into ‘partygate’.
REUTERS Prime Minister Boris Johnson holds a news conference at Downing Street in London on Wednesday in response to the publicatio­n of a report into ‘partygate’.

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