“Conclusive, Decisive Result”: UK PM Boris Johnson After Trust Vote Win
London: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson survived the voice of trust on Monday but a major rebellion in his conservative party for what the “party” scandal called his authority and left him with the struggle to win the support again.
Prime Minister Johnson, who scored the winning election in 2019, was under increased pressure after he and the staff held an alcohol-fueled party at the road office and his residence when Britain was under locking to handle Pandemi Covid-19.
The voting was a blow to the Prime Minister, with 41% of his parliamentary members giving ballots to their leadership after months of scandal and mistakes that had raised questions on their authority to govern Britain and knocked on their position among the community.
But Johnson, an expert in the return of politics, instead illustrates the voting as a “decisive outcome” which means that “as a government that we can continue and focus on things that I think are very important for people”.
“We can focus on what we do to help people with living expenses, what we do to clean the Covid backlog, what we do to make the road and the community safer by extinguishing more police,” said Johnson, who for a week – Weeks have tried to move the national conversation from “Partygate”.
This is a change in wealth for Johnson and underlines the depth of anger towards him. He met with Jeers’ choirs and ridicule, and some cheers that were muted, at events to celebrate Yobel Platinum Queen Elizabeth in the last few days.
Some parliamentary members said the voting, who saw 211 MPs gave ballots supporting Johnson against 148, worse than expected for the Prime Minister, who had never been denied after winning the largest majority conservative in more than three decades.
“Boris Johnson will feel relieved in this vote. But he will also understand that the next priority is to rebuild party cohesion,” David Jones, a former minister, told Reuters. “I’m sure he will be equivalent to challenges.”
The others are less optimistic, with a member of the conservative parliament said on an anonymous condition: “This is clearly far worse than most people expected. But it’s still too early to say what will happen now.”
Roger Gale, an old critic from Johnson, urged the Prime Minister “to return to Downing Street tonight and consider very carefully where he left here”.
Suspension of 12 months
By winning the voice of confidence, Johnson had received a sentence of 12 months when parliamentary members could not bring other challenges. But its predecessor Theresa May scored better in the 2018 voting only to resign six months later.
Dozens of conservative parliament members have voiced the concern whether Johnson, 57, has lost his authority to govern Britain, who faces the risk of recession, rising fuel prices and food and travel chaos caused in the capital of London.
But the cabinet gathered around him and highlighted what they said was the success of the government: the fast launch of the Covid-19 vaccination and the British response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
The majority of conservative parliament members – at least 180 – must choose to fight Johnson so that he is deleted.
Previously, Street Street office spokesman Johnson said the voting would “allow the government to withdraw the line and continue” and that the Prime Minister welcomed the opportunity to submit his case to MPs.
Jacob Rees-Mogg, Minister of Opportunity Brexit, told Sky News that completing the departure of the British from the European Union would “significantly risk without encouragement and energy”.
Johnson has locked the horns with Brussels in Northern Ireland, increasing the prospects of more obstacles to British trade and alarming leaders in Ireland, Europe and the United States about the risk of provincial peace agreement in 1998.
But that is the month of stories about what happened in Downing Street, including fights and vomiting caused by alcohol, when many people were prevented to say goodbye to people who were loved in the funeral, who did real damage.
The move caused parliamentary members from various party wings to reveal that they had turned against their leaders. A former allies accused the Prime Minister of insulting voters and the party while remaining in power.
“You have led the culture of casual law solving in 10 Downing Street in connection with Covid,” Jesse Norman, former Minister of Junior, said before the voting