UK Update: Boris Johnson to resign - Tuesday: 2 UK Cabinet ministers resign from Boris Johnson's government, putting further pressure on the prime minister

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Two of Britain’s most senior Cabinet ministers resigned on Tuesday, a move that could spell the end of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s leadership after months of scandals.

Treasury chief Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid resigned within minutes of each other after a day in which the prime minister was forced to acknowledge he had to change his story on the way he handled allegations of sexual misconduct by a senior member of his government.

“It is with enormous regret that I must tell you that I can no longer, in good conscience, continue serving in this government,’’ Javid said in his resignation letter. “I am instinctively a team player but the British people also rightly expect integrity from their government.’’

Sunak said “the public rightly expect government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously. ”

“I recognize this may be my last ministerial job, but I believe these standards are worth fighting for and that is why I am resigning.”

Johnson has been hit by allegations he failed to come clean about a lawmaker who was appointed to a senior position despite claims of sexual misconduct.

Johnson has faced pressure to explain what he knew about previous misconduct allegations against lawmaker Chris Pincher, who resigned as deputy chief whip Thursday amid complaints that he groped two men at a private club.

Minutes before the resignations of Javid and Sunak were announced, Johnson said Pincher should have been fired from the government after a previous 2019 incident.

Asked if it was an error to appoint Pincher to the government, Johnson: “I think it was a mistake and I apologize for it. In hindsight it was the wrong thing to do.”

The government’s explanation shifted repeatedly over the past five days. Ministers initially said Johnson was not aware of any allegations when he promoted Pincher to the post in February.

On Monday, a spokesman said Johnson knew of sexual misconduct allegations that were “either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint.”

That account did not sit well with Simon McDonald, the most senior civil servant at the U.K. Foreign Office from 2015 to 2020. In a highly unusual move, he said Tuesday that the prime minister’s office still wasn’t telling the truth.

McDonald said in a letter to the parliamentary commissioner for standards that he received complaints about Pincher’s behavior in the summer of 2019, shortly after Pincher became a Foreign Office minister. An investigation upheld the complaint, and Pincher apologized for his actions, McDonald said.

McDonald disputed that Johnson was unaware of the allegations or that the complaints were dismissed because they had been resolved or not made formally.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

LONDON — A former top British civil servant said Tuesday that Boris Johnson’s office wasn’t telling the truth about sexual misconduct allegations against a senior member of the prime minister’s government.

Johnson has faced pressure to explain what he knew about previous misconduct allegations against lawmaker Chris Pincher, who resigned as deputy chief whip Thursday amid complaints that he groped two men at a private club.

The government’s explanation shifted repeatedly over the past five days. Ministers initially said Johnson was not aware of any allegations when he promoted Pincher to the post in February.

On Monday, a spokesman said Johnson knew of sexual misconduct allegations that were “either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint.”

That account did not sit well with Simon McDonald, the most senior civil servant at the U.K. Foreign Office from 2015 to 2020. In a highly unusual move, he said Tuesday that the prime minister’s office still wasn’t telling the truth.

McDonald said in a letter to the parliamentary commissioner for standards that he received complaints about Pincher’s behavior in the summer of 2019, shortly after Pincher became a Foreign Office minister. An investigation upheld the complaint, and Pincher apologized for his actions, McDonald said.

McDonald disputed that Johnson was unaware of the allegations or that the complaints were dismissed because they had been resolved or not made formally.

“The original No. 10 line is not true, and the modification is still not accurate,” McDonald wrote, referring to the prime minister’s Downing Street office. “Mr. Johnson was briefed in person about the initiation and outcome of the investigation.

“There was a ‘formal complaint.’ Allegations were ‘resolved’ only in the sense that the investigation was completed; Mr. Pincher was not exonerated. To characterize the allegations as ‘unsubstantiated’ is therefore wrong.”

Hours after McDonald’s comments came out, Johnson’s office changed its story again, saying the prime minister forgot he was told that Pincher was the subject of an official complaint.

The office confirmed Johnson was briefed on the complaint by Foreign Office officials in 2019, a “number of months” after it took place. His office said it took some time to establish the briefing took place.

Cabinet Office minister Michael Ellis told lawmakers in the House of Commons that when Johnson was made aware of the issue in late 2019, he was told that the permanent secretary had taken the necessary action and so there was no question about Pincher remaining as a minister.

“Last week, when fresh allegations arose, the prime minister did not immediately recall the conversation in late 2019 about this incident,’’ Ellis said. “As soon as he was reminded, the No. 10 press office corrected their public lines.”

The latest revelations are fueling discontent within Johnson’s Cabinet after ministers were forced to publicly deliver the prime minister’s denials, only to have the explanation shift the next day.

The Times of London on Tuesday published an analysis of the situation under the headline “Claim of lying puts Boris Johnson in peril.”

A month ago, Johnson survived a vote of no confidence in which more than 40% of Conservative Party lawmakers voted to remove him from office. The prime minister’s shifting responses to months of allegations about lockdown-breaking parties in government offices that ultimately resulted in 126 fines, including one levied against Johnson, fueled concerns about his leadership.

Two weeks later, Conservative candidates were badly beaten in two special elections to fill vacant seats in Parliament, adding to the discontent within Johnson’s party.

When Pincher resigned last week as deputy chief whip, a key position in enforcing party discipline, he told the prime minister that he “drank far too much” the previous night and had “embarrassed myself and other people.”

Johnson initially refused to suspend Pincher from the Conservative Party, but he relented after a formal complaint about the groping allegations was filed with parliamentary authorities.

Critics suggested Johnson was slow to react because he didn’t want to be in the position of forcing Pincher to resign his Parliament seat and setting up the Conservatives for another potential special election defeat.

Even before the Pincher scandal, suggestions were swirling that Johnson may soon face another no-confidence vote.

In the next few weeks, Conservative lawmakers will elect new members to the committee that sets parliamentary rules for the party. Several candidates have suggested they would support changing the rules to allow for another vote of no confidence. The existing rules require 12 months between such votes.

Senior Conservative lawmaker Roger Gale, a long-standing critic of Johnson, said he would support a change of the rules of the Conservative 1922 Committee.

“Mr. Johnson has for three days now been sending ministers — in one case a Cabinet minister — out to defend the indefensible, effectively to lie on his behalf. That cannot be allowed to continue,” Gale told the BBC. “This prime minister has trashed the reputation of a proud and honorable party for honesty and decency, and that is not acceptable.’’

https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...1174ac-fc54-11ec-b39d-71309168014b_story.html (A)



Johnson will make statement later today​

As we've been reporting, Boris Johnson will resign as Conservative leader today and will continue as prime minister until the autumn.

Johnson will publicly announce his resignation later today.

A No 10 spokesman said: "The prime minister will make a statement to the country today."

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A couple more have apparently dropped out, but no-one major.
Gove still in the cabinet but has told him to resign. That's a mortal blow. 1922 Committee meeting to change the rules to allow another voted of no confidence. He's actually finished this time unless the army arrest the opposition.
 
Gove still in the cabinet but has told him to resign. That's a mortal blow. 1922 Committee meeting to change the rules to allow another voted of no confidence. He's actually finished this time unless the army arrest the opposition.
The 1922 Committee held off on that for now as they have a delegation vote next week. Brady has apparently just gone into Number 10 though to talk to Boris. He's clearly offering an out before they go to town on him.
 
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The 1922 Committee held off that for now as they have a delegation vote next week. Brady has apparently just gone into Number 10 though to talk to Boris. He's clearly offering an out before they go to town on him.
Missed that bit as work was a long day. Thanks, Kiwi Bro!
 
"Ok lads, we have just secured a historic win in our snap election, we should be able to pass any laws and requirements we want for the next 5 years, so long as we don't massively fuck up, we could be in power for decades".

Proceeds to massively fuck up.
 
Damnit Tories couldn't you for once have a bloody and violent succession challenge rather than this piss poor stuff?

I want Priti to walk out triumphant wearing Boris's scalp as a trophy, hurl the blood of the fallen at Labour's front benchers and tell them they're next if they vote against her on anything.
 
Who else but Boris?
Gove. He would actually do a good job, He has essentially been given a bunch of ministerial posts he was supposed to fail at and with the exception of Education Minister (which was him trying to kick a bunch of marxist cry-baby teacher's unions into shape, he'd have an easier job now given they're all genderqueer and normie teachers hate them) he did well.

He's a good back of the scenes operator and, if Popbitch is to be believed, hung like a horse.

He's the manager you don't particular like as a human but you want to work for as shit will get done and you'll get a tap on the back if you do well.

We don't need anymore memes leading the country. (Although I am enjoying all the Pritti posting on /pol/, god bless you, our Curry Queen, the Indo-Ayran Saviour, etc.)
 

Downing Street: Michael Gove sacked by Boris Johnson who is reshuffling cabinet​


Michael Gove, one of the most senior ministers in the British government, earlier told Prime Minister Boris Johnson he must quit. As a consequence, the PM has firmed him as he seeks to reshuffle out those that oppose his leadership from within his cabinet.

Resignations began on Tuesday after Downing Street admitted the PM had known about allegations of inappropriate behaviour by disgraced MP Chris Pincher in 2019 before hiring him as deputy chief whip in February.

Mr Pincher resigned from the role last week after further allegations that he groped two men at a private club in London, and he was later suspended from the Conservative Party.

https://www.fxstreet.com/news/downi...hnson-who-is-reshuffling-cabinet-202207062022 (A)
 
>Rishi Sunak
>Sajid Javid
>Bim Afolami

These are names I'd expect to find in my spam mail for bullshit jobs that's nowhere near my location (which is an actual thing that happens), not names for political people in fucking bongland.
Have you not been paying attention to fucking Bongland like... ever?
Then they're dummies. Closeted uphill gardener is less relatable than Ree Mogg, the Member for 1875.
Its fucking ironic that Rees-Mogg, perhaps the most patrician man in Parliament at the moment, is the one most concerned about the future and not the present.
Who else but Boris?
Who else but the Tories?
 
Outside of "trucks of peace", "you got a loicense for that [insert random illegal thing here]?" and migrants shitting up most, if not all, of Europe, I don't know squat about Europolitics
If you're aware of migrants shitting the place up... why are you surprised they're in the PM's Cabinet?
 
Michael Gove got fired by Boris Johnson. I keep hearing people say Gove wants the seat and Gove told Johnson to step down so Johnson fired him. Gove may have overplayed his hand and now the next prime minister will be a street shitter with a name that sounds like a prayer from the necronomicon.
 
I’m having great fun at both watching the Government implode and the opposition being too inept as usual to do anything but take another L. Like really?
They’re all supposed to be off for their summer holibobs soon so fuck knows who will be running what.

You can only laugh because it’s so fucking tragic.
 
All because the public school toff couldn't keep his party hat in the cupboard. Glorious. Today should be another slaughter. Can't fucking wait.
 
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