London, United Kingdom
July 8, 2022 — The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Boris Johnson, has resigned on Thursday as the leader of Britain’s Conservative party, paving way for the selection of a new prime minister after dozens of ministers quit his scandal-hit government, AFP reported.
According to Johnson, it is the popular demand for the party to have a new leader and a new Prime Minister.
“It is clearly the will of the parliamentary Conservative party that there should be a new leader of that party, and therefore a new prime minister,” Johnson said outside 10 Downing Street.
Johnson, 58, announced that he would step down after a slew of resignations from his top team in protest at his leadership but would stay on as prime minister until a replacement is found.
The timetable for a Tory leadership race will be announced next week, he said, after three tumultuous years in office defined by Brexit, the Covid pandemic, and non-stop controversy over his reputation for mendacity.
The election to replace him will take place over the summer and the victor will replace Johnson at the party’s annual conference in early October, the BBC reported.
He said he was “sad… to be giving up the best job in the world” and justified fighting on in the final hours to deliver the mandate he won in a general election in December 2019.
In the frenzied hours building up to Johnson’s announcement, opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer had welcomed his impending departure.
But Starmer said “a proper change of government” was necessary and demanded a no-confidence vote in parliament, potentially triggering a general election, rather than Johnson “clinging on for months and months”.
Even while eyeing the exit, Johnson on Thursday sought to steady the ship with several appointments to replace the departed cabinet members.
They included Greg Clark, an arch “remainer” opposed to Britain’s divorce from the European Union, which Johnson had championed.
Johnson had been clinging on to power despite being opposed by more than 50 government resignations, expressing defiance late Wednesday.
But Thursday’s departure of education minister Michelle Donelan and a plea to quit from finance minister Nadhim Zahawi, only in their jobs for two days, appeared to tip the balance along with warnings of a new no-confidence vote by Tory MPs.