Boris Johnson: He saved his head but received a heavy blow to his prestige – “A winner”

The British Prime Minister has been immersed in the “partygate” case for about 2.5 years Boris Johnson. He may have saved his head by winning the vote on the motion of censure, but the result dealt him another heavy blow to his prestige.

Partygates are the parties that were regularly organized on Downing Street during the lockdown for the rest of the British. And yesterday’s vote highlighted deep rifts within the ruling Conservative Party.

From the 359 Tory MPs took part in the vote, 211 gave their confidence in the Prime Minister and 148 rejected it, that is, 41% of the electorate: their number is sufficient to paralyze the functioning of the government.

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Boris Johnson hastens to welcome “decisive result” which allows “to move forward” and called on the party to unite, clarifying that “it is certain that it does not have early elections in mind”.

But many commentators have highlighted the prime minister’s dangerous position. “A prime minister with dignity would look at the numbers, accept the fact that he has lost the support of a significant part of his party and think about his position, but I do not think he will,” said Roger Gale, one of the MPs who withdrew its support for Boris Johnson.

Opposition leader Kir Starmer, for his part, said Boris Johnson was “completely unfit for the postAnd criticized the “divided Tories, who are busy keeping Boris Johnson in power, without a plan.”

The British press

Voting is the first issue of the British press today. The Times they are talking about one “Received winner”, Recalling that Theresa May had survived in 2018 a form proposal with a lower percentage of negative votes, before being forced to resign a few months later.

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“The prime minister is in power after the humiliation of the vote,” according to Guardian.

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THE Daily Mirror, at the center of the revelations about the “Partygate” case has the central title: “The party is over, Boris”.

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For Financial Times, the result of the vote “hit him hard and revealed the dimensions of the rift and the dissatisfaction within his party”.

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No one can be reprimanded for one year

Boris Johnson has so far ruled out resigning. After weeks of gossip, developments were quick yesterday, when it was announced that the voting process on motion of censure after the submission of 54 letters from Tory MPs requesting his resignation to the 1922 committee.

In the event of the defeat of the Prime Minister in the vote, an internal vote is scheduled for the election of a new party leader and Prime Minister, at a critical juncture due to the war in Ukraine and the galloping inflation. According to the regulation, no new motion of censure may be tabled against the Prime Minister for one year.

The British are furious

Despite the accumulated scandals, popular anger and resentment of his deputies, Boris Johnson has remained in office for the past few months, investing in his leading role in the Western reaction to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

He was also favored by the absence of a prominent Conservative leader in power for the last 12 years, since the star of the finance minister and possible successor faded due to the revelations about his fortune and the tax “arrangements” of his wealthy wife. as reported by AFP, citing the Athenian-Macedonian News Agency.

The collapse of Boris Johnson’s popularity has already cost the Conservatives significant losses in the local elections in early May. The majority is increasingly doubting the ability of the “Bojo”, who was greeted by the crowd during the celebrations of the Queen’s Jubilee, to win the 2024 elections.

The poll

His bizarre, often anarchic, personality, once considered a trump card, is now infuriating the British.

According to a poll YouGov, 60% of Britons want the Conservatives oust Boris Johnson from the leadership, but that percentage is limited to 32% among Tory voters.

However, the consequences of “partygate” do not stop here. After the police and the public servant Sue Gray, a new investigation is underway, this time parliamentary. If this investigation concludes that Boris Johnson misled the House of Commons when he stated that he did not violate the rules, it is considered that he should resign.

Source: News Beast

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