British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces a crunch Conservative Party confidence vote later on Monday after 54 of his Tory MPs triggered a contest following a string of scandals that have shattered confidence in his leadership.
The beleaguered UK leader has spent months battling to maintain his grip on power after the so-called “Partygate” controversy saw him become the first serving UK prime minister found to have broken the law. If he loses, he will be forced to step down as Conservative party leader and prime minister.
A scathing internal probe into the scandal said last month that he had presided over a culture of Covid lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street that ran late into the night and featured a drunken fight among staff. Johnson, who won a landslide election victory in December 2019 on a vow to “get Brexit done”, has steadfastly refused to stand down.
The 57-year-old has said he takes responsibility for the saga and pointed to a reorganisation of the structure inside No 10 while insisting that he must get on with the job. A Downing Street spokesperson said Johnson “welcomes the opportunity to make his case to MPs” and Monday’s vote was “a chance to end months of speculation and allow the government to draw a line and move on”.
Minutes earlier, Graham Brady, who heads the backbench committee of Conservative MPs which oversees party leadership challenges, confirmed that the threshold of 15 per cent of Tory MPs seeking a confidence vote had been exceeded.
“In accordance with the rules, a ballot will be held between 6pm and 10pm today,” he said, noting the votes would be counted immediately afterwards and an announcement then made “at a time to be advised”. Brady told reporters that Johnson was informed last night — as four days of national celebrations for Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee ended — that the threshold to trigger a vote had been reached.
“We agreed the timetable for the confidence vote to take place and he shared my view … that vote should happen as soon as could reasonably take place and that would be today,” he added. Brady did not disclose how many letters of no-confidence in Johnson he had received from Conservative MPs, noting some colleagues had post-dated their letters until after the jubilee celebrations. 359 Conservative MPs currently sitting in parliament will decide Johnson’s fate by secret ballot, and if he wins — half the votes cast plus one — the embattled leader cannot be challenged again for a year.—Agencies