Khaleej Times

Conservati­ves growing restive over Johnson’s leadership

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson says it’s time for the government to “move on” after months of scandal. Some of his Conservati­ve Party colleagues think it’s time he moved on instead.

A dozen Conservati­ve lawmakers have called for a vote on Johnson’s leadership since last week, when an investigat­or’s report blamed “failures of leadership and judgment” by the prime minister and senior officials for allowing boozy government parties that broke the UK’S Covid-19 lockdown rules.

Under Tory party rules, a noconfiden­ce vote in the leader will be triggered if 15 per cent of party lawmakers — currently 54 — write letters calling for one.

Bob Neill, a senior Conservati­ve legislator who chairs the House of Commons Justice Committee, said on Tuesday it was “in the party’s interest, and actually the country’s interest, for him to move on.”

Lawmaker John Stevenson said he had sent a letter because a confidence vote was the only way to “draw a line” under recent controvers­ies.

Johnson said last week that senior civil servant Sue Gray’s report should put an end to the “partygate” scandal, which saw 83 people, including Johnson, fined by police over parties in government buildings in 2020 and 2021.

Johnson said he took “full responsibi­lity” and was sorry — but denied he knowingly broke any rules or lied when he told Parliament last year that there had been no parties. He said it was time to “move on” and focus on grappling with issues like Britain’s cost-of-living crisis and the war in Ukraine. But a growing number of

Conservati­ve lawmakers are calling for a no-confidence vote in Johnson, who won the party a big parliament­ary majority in 2019 but has been dogged by questions about his ethics and judgement.

Former attorney general Jeremy Wright said “partygate” had damaged “the institutio­ns and authority of government” and concluded that “for the good of this and future government­s, the prime minister should resign.”

If Johnson lost a confidence vote, he would be replaced as Conservati­ve leader and prime minister. If he won, he could not face another challenge for a year.

It’s unclear how many letters have been sent but it’s likely more than the 28 Conservati­ve lawmakers who have called publicly for Johnson to quit. There is a growing feeling in the Conservati­ve Party that the 54 threshold will be reached in the next few weeks.

Former Conservati­ve leader William Hague said he thought Johnson “is in real trouble” and a vote was inevitable.

“I think the Sue Gray report has

been one of those sort of slow-fuse explosions in politics,” Hague told Times Radio.

He said “the Conservati­ve Party will need to resolve this one way

or another, obviously because to be an effective party they either need to rally behind the prime minister they’ve got, or they need to decide to force him out.” — ap

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