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  • Boris Johnson Resigns

    It was too much to outrun. The cascade of resignations were inevitable and only made worse by Johnson's cavalier "Nothing to see here!" attitude


    'Them's the breaks': Boris Johnson quits as UK prime minister


    Cabinet ministers resigned en masse, telling him to go
    • Johnson bows out after spate of scandals
    • Aims to stay on til successor named, many want him out now
    • Combative, chaotic approach to governing alienated many
    • Britain's economy slumping amid cost-of-living crisis

    LONDON, July 7 (Reuters) - Scandal-ridden Boris Johnson announced on Thursday he would quit as British prime minister after he dramatically lost the support of his ministers and most Conservative lawmakers, but said he would stay on until his successor was chosen.

    Bowing to the inevitable as more than 50 ministers quit and lawmakers said he must go, an isolated and powerless Johnson said it was clear his party wanted someone else in charge.



    "Today I have appointed a cabinet to serve, as I will, until a new leader is in place," Johnson said outside his Downing Street office where his speech was watched by close allies and his wife Carrie.

    "I know that there will be many people who are relieved and perhaps quite a few who will also be disappointed. And I want you to know how sad I am to be giving up the best job in the world. But them's the breaks."

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    Johnson gave no apology for the events leading to his announcement and said his forced departure was "eccentric".

    There were cheers and applause as he began his speech, while boos rang out from some outside the gates of Downing Street.

    After days of battling for his job, Johnson had been deserted by all but a handful of his closest allies after the latest in a series of scandals broke their willingness to support him.



    The Conservatives will now have to elect a new leader, a process which could take weeks or months, with details to be announced next week. read more

    A snap YouGov poll found that defence minister Ben Wallace was the favourite among Conservative Party members to replace Johnson, followed by junior trade minister Penny Mordaunt and former finance minister Rishi Sunak.

    While Johnson said he would stay on, opponents and many in his own party said he should leave immediately and hand over to his deputy, Dominic Raab.

    Keir Starmer, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, said he would call a parliamentary confidence vote if the Conservatives did not remove Johnson at once. read more

    "We can't go on with this prime minister clinging on for months and months to come," he said.

    The crisis comes as Britons are facing the tightest squeeze on their finances in decades, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, with soaring inflation, and the economy forecast to be the weakest among major nations in 2023 apart from Russia.

    It also follows years of internal division sparked by the narrow 2016 vote to leave the European Union, and threats to the make-up of the United Kingdom itself with demands for another Scottish independence referendum, the second in a decade.

    Support for Johnson had evaporated during one of the most turbulent 24 hours in recent British political history, epitomised by finance minister, Nadhim Zahawi, who was only appointed to his post on Tuesday, calling on his boss to resign.

    Zahawi and other cabinet ministers went to Downing Street on Wednesday evening, along with a senior representative of those lawmakers not in government, to tell Johnson the game was up.

    Initially, Johnson refused to go and seemed set to dig in, sacking Michael Gove - a member of his top ministerial team who was one of the first to tell him he needed to resign - in a bid to reassert his authority.

    But by Thursday morning as a slew of resignations poured in, it became clear his position was untenable.

    "You must do the right thing and go now," Zahawi tweeted.

    Some of those that remained in post, including Wallace, said they were only doing so because they had an obligation to keep the country safe.

    There had been so many ministerial resignations that the government had been facing paralysis. Despite his impending departure, Johnson began appointing ministers to vacant posts.

    "It is our duty now to make sure the people of this country have a functioning government," Michael Ellis, a minister in the Cabinet Office department which oversees the running of government, told parliament.


    FROM POPULAR TO DESERTED


    The ebullient Johnson came to power nearly three years ago, promising to deliver Brexit and rescue it from the bitter wrangling that followed the 2016 referendum. He shrugged off concerns from some that his narcissism, failure to deal with details, and a reputation for deceit meant he was unsuitable.

    Since then, some Conservatives had enthusiastically backed the former journalist and London mayor while others, despite reservations, supported him because he was able to appeal to parts of the electorate that usually rejected their party.

    That was borne out in the December 2019 election. But his administration's combative and often chaotic approach to governing and a series of scandals exhausted the goodwill of many of his lawmakers while opinion polls show he is no longer popular with the public at large.

    The recent crisis erupted after lawmaker Chris Pincher, who held a government role involved in pastoral care, was forced to quit over accusations he groped men in a private member's club.

    Johnson had to apologise after it emerged that he was briefed that Pincher had been the subject of previous sexual misconduct complaints before he appointed him. The prime minister said he had forgotten.

    This followed months of scandals and missteps, including a damning report into boozy parties at his Downing Street residence and office that broke COVID-19 lockdown rules and saw him fined by police over a gathering for his 56th birthday.

    There have also been policy U-turns, an ill-fated defence of a lawmaker who broke lobbying rules, and criticism that he has not done enough to tackle inflation, with many Britons struggling to cope with rising fuel and food prices.

    In his resignation speech, Johnson highlighted his successes - from completing Brexit to ensuring the fastest COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Europe. But he said his attempts to persuade colleagues that changing leader while there was war in Ukraine and the government was delivering on its agenda had failed.

    "I regret not to have been successful in those arguments. And of course, it's painful not to be able to see through so many ideas and projects myself," he said.

    "But as we've seen at Westminster the herd instinct is powerful - when the herd moves, it moves and, my friends, in politics no one is remotely indispensable."
    “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
    Mark Twain

  • #2
    The end of an error...
    Trust me?
    I'm an economist!

    Comment


    • #3
      …then again maybe the horse might learn to sing!
      As much as I detest the man, Little Boris Johnson has done it again!
      He’s managed to “have his cake and eat it too”! Yes, he’s resigned as head of the British Conservative Party,
      but is remaining as Prime Minister for a couple of months.
      Why???
      There’s an old fable of a thief who was sentenced to be executed,
      but was able to convince the King that he would be able to teach his favorite horse to sing within a year!
      When tasked by his fellow prisoners the impossibility of his task, the thief said quite plainly:
      “I’ve gotten a year’s stay of execution, and in a year anything might happen. The king might die,
      I might die, the horse might die…or who knows the horse might learn to sing!!!”

      Little Boris is if nothing else an opportunist, and here’s he’s now got a couple of months remaining as Prime Minister,
      ​​​​​​​with Parliament in a two moth summer recess.
      When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin

      Comment


      • #4
        Good riddance to a total assclown.
        “He was the most prodigious personification of all human inferiorities. He was an utterly incapable, unadapted, irresponsible, psychopathic personality, full of empty, infantile fantasies, but cursed with the keen intuition of a rat or a guttersnipe. He represented the shadow, the inferior part of everybody’s personality, in an overwhelming degree, and this was another reason why they fell for him.”

        Comment


        • #5
          You can only 'fail uprward' for so long until either reality kicks in or you go as high as you can. Boris got the thing he wanted most - to be PM - and he successfully pushed Brexit to get it. He was fortunate to be a member of a party with little to no discernable talent in parliament and opposed by the worst Labour leader sincer Michael Foot. His ability to reach the top was as much a tribute to the fantasy world in which the British left exists as the tolerance for mediocrity of the right.

          The only bad news here is that they might find a leader who can beat Starmer and keep this rotting corpse of a government in power for even longer.
          sigpic

          Win nervously lose tragically - Reds C C

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Bigfella View Post
            You can only 'fail uprward' for so long until either reality kicks in or you go as high as you can. Boris got the thing he wanted most - to be PM - and he successfully pushed Brexit to get it. He was fortunate to be a member of a party with little to no discernable talent in parliament and opposed by the worst Labour leader sincer Michael Foot. His ability to reach the top was as much a tribute to the fantasy world in which the British left exists as the tolerance for mediocrity of the right.

            The only bad news here is that they might find a leader who can beat Starmer and keep this rotting corpse of a government in power for even longer.
            I loved the leader of the opposition's comment on his resignation after Johnson was literally forced out of office by virtually the entire sitting membership of Conservative Party - 'the sinking ship is fleeing the rat'.
            If you are emotionally invested in 'believing' something is true you have lost the ability to tell if it is true.

            Comment


            • #7
              Unlike the GOP, the Brits Still Have Guardrails

              It took longer than it should have, but Britain is showing us what happens when a political party draws red lines.

              As David Frum explained on the podcast yesterday, Boris Johnson was ousted as PM because the Conservatives told him that it was time to go. Frum writes in the Atlantic: “Johnson will leave office for much the same reason, and in much the same way, as his predecessors Theresa May, David Cameron, and Tony Blair left it: because he lost the confidence of his party.”

              The contrast with the GOP is stark. JVL makes the point in the Triad:
              .
              However popular Johnson was with the Conservative party’s base, at the end of the day it was the Conservative party elites who deposed him….

              [Whatever] the rationalizations along the way, the Conservatives finally found a line they would not cross. Or, perhaps more accurately, a straw that broke the camel’s back.

              In America the Republican party still has not found such a line even after Donald Trump attempted a coup to overthrow the presidential election.

              Whatever you think of Britain’s Conservative party, at least they remain a more or less normal political institution. They are not so compromised that they represent an ongoing threat to democratic self-governance.

              The same cannot be said for the Republican party in America.
              ____________

              “He was the most prodigious personification of all human inferiorities. He was an utterly incapable, unadapted, irresponsible, psychopathic personality, full of empty, infantile fantasies, but cursed with the keen intuition of a rat or a guttersnipe. He represented the shadow, the inferior part of everybody’s personality, in an overwhelming degree, and this was another reason why they fell for him.”

              Comment


              • #8

                Whatever you think of Britain’s Conservative party, at least they remain a more or less normal political institution. They are not so compromised that they represent an ongoing threat to democratic self-governance.

                The same cannot be said for the Republican party in America.

                While I disagree with much of the policies of the Conservative Party (though my opinion means squat as I am not British citizen) they at least kept to their core values and understood what it meant to be a responsible political party.

                They didn't decide to follow the Cult of Boris...unlike some who are beholden to the Cult of Mar-A-Lago.
                “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                Mark Twain

                Comment


                • #9
                  Well this just got conservatively interesting

                  https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=645334856343463

                  Kemi has thrown her hat in the ring

                  My vote for Brexit in 2016 was a vote of confidence in our abilities as a sovereign country. We have failed to capitalise on that election winning majority of 2019. Change does not mean reheated versions of 1970s, ’80s or ’90s policies, but a new mission for our age. This requires a smart and nimble centre-right vision that can achieve things despite entrenched opposition from a cultural establishment that will not accept that the world has moved on from Blairism.

                  Our problems are not unique. Politics is in crisis around the world. The centre-right is out of power in many countries — America, France, Australia and Germany to name a few.

                  The mainstream right has too often become detached from its voter base, and rather than seeking to understand the new challenges voters faced, ignored them, leading to electoral failure and paving the way for populism in desperation. We cannot allow that to happen here.

                  Too often people feel that whoever is elected, the answer is more government. By promising too much and trying to solve every problem, politicians don’t reassure and inspire, they disappoint and drive disillusion. More taxes. More rules and regulations. And ever cheaper borrowing to keep government afloat no matter the cost to savers or the wider economy.

                  Instead, we need strong but limited government focused on the essentials.

                  Lower taxes yes, but to boost growth and productivity, and accompanied by tight spending discipline.

                  Meanwhile our country is falsely criticised as oppressive to minorities and immoral, because it enforces its own borders. We cannot maintain a cohesive nation state with the zero-sum identity politics we see today.

                  Exemplified by coercive control, the imposition of views, the shutting down of debate, the end of due process, identity politics is not about tolerance or individual rights but the very opposite of our crucial and enduring British values.

                  And if we are to see the change we need in this country we need an intellectual framework which recognises that in politics, there is no division between the cultural or economic sphere. It is no surprise the fiercest proclaimers of “social justice” usually believe in the power of government over the people, in the power of the bureaucrat over the individual, and have a distrust of people making their own decisions in the economic sphere just as much as the social.

                  Without change the Conservative Party, Britain, and the western world will continue to drift. Aggressive and assertive rivals will outpace us economically and outmanoeuvre us internationally.

                  It won’t be enough just to offer better management of relative decline. We need the discipline to transform government into an effective and streamlined machine for delivery, not a piggy bank for pressure groups. Rather than legislate for hurt feelings as we risk doing with the Online Safety Bill, we must strengthen our democratic culture at a time when democratic values are under assault from without and within. We need to reinvigorate the case for free speech, free markets and the institutions that defend a free people because our values and our ideas are too precious not to fight for with all our heart.
                  In the realm of spirit, seek clarity; in the material world, seek utility.

                  Leibniz

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Albany Rifles View Post
                    Whatever you think of Britain’s Conservative party, at least they remain a more or less normal political institution. They are not so compromised that they represent an ongoing threat to democratic self-governance.

                    The same cannot be said for the Republican party in America.

                    While I disagree with much of the policies of the Conservative Party (though my opinion means squat as I am not British citizen) they at least kept to their core values and understood what it meant to be a responsible political party.

                    They didn't decide to follow the Cult of Boris...unlike some who are beholden to the Cult of Mar-A-Lago.
                    Had dinner with a longtime friend who is a retired business and finance professor who has made a long term study of the impact of the EU, the Euro & finally BREXIT's impact on the UK's economy. And prior to him becoming a professor he was a small business owner/operator and is definitely a lifelong Republican. So of course we talked about Boris's resignation. He said the one thing to realize...so many of the Tory lower/junior ministers when they left the government also walked away from political careers...outright quitting. Maybe to return to politics later but not for now. Not sure if that is being reported widely but it is definitely not something we are hearing in the States. My friend said that is the real story here...many good folks being driven from government by the actions of party leadership.
                    “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                    Mark Twain

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Down goes Frazier! Down goes Frazier!! Down goes Frazier!!!!




                      Liz Truss resigns as UK prime minister


                      By Rob Picheta, CNN
                      Updated 8:43 AM EDT, Thu October 20, 2022
                      • Liz Truss said she will resign as Britain’s prime minister after a disastrous six-week tenure.
                      • Truss is set to become the UK’s shortest-serving leader ever, with another Conservative leadership election due to take place within a week.
                      • Her statement comes hours after Suella Braverman, Truss’ home secretary, dramatically resigned with a blistering attack on the PM’s leadership.
                      • Truss fired her finance minister just last week after a disastrous and since-ditched financial plan caused turmoil on the markets.


                      4 min agoTruss departure plunges Britain deeper into chaos

                      From CNN's Rob Picheta in LondonLiz Truss’s departure ensures a fresh power struggle within the ruling Conservative Party, which has hemorrhaged public support for the past year and has now overthrown Boris Johnson and Truss in the space of a few months.

                      A trickle of Conservative MPs called on her to go and Truss ultimately bowed to the pressure on Thursday.

                      Britain now faces the prospect of a third different leader entering office since its last general election, an unprecedented scenario in modern peacetime that will lead to serious questions about the mandate of the government and increase a growing clamor for a fresh vote.

                      It is a spectacular fall from grace for a party that won a landslide victory under Johnson in a December 2019 election that was won on the then-leader’s promise to deliver Brexit.

                      A new leadership contest will take place on an expedited timetable soon, with Truss saying a new leader will be chosen within a week. Figures who could be in the running include Rishi Sunak, the former chancellor who lost to Truss during the summer race; Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the Commons who was second in the leadership contest behind Sunak until Truss overtook them both in the final round of voting; and Jeremy Hunt, the current finance minister who Truss turned to after sacking Kwarteng on Friday.

                      And a potential return to frontline politics for Boris Johnson has not been ruled out, with some of Johnson’s allies in the Commons claiming in recent weeks that moving to remove him was a mistake.

                      7 min agoLiz Truss will become Britain's shortest-serving prime minister ever

                      From CNN's Rob Picheta in LondonLiz Truss said outside Downing Street that she “set out a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms of Brexit.”

                      “I recognise though, given the situation, I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative party,” she said.

                      Truss said she has tendered her resignation to the King, and a leadership election will take place within a week.

                      That timeline would make her, by some distance, Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister ever.

                      8 min agoBREAKING: Liz Truss quits as Britain’s prime minister

                      From CNN's Rob Picheta in London
                      British Prime Minister Liz Truss gives statement outside Number 10 Downing Street, London, on October 20. Toby Melville/Reuters
                      Liz Truss is set tobecome Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister ever, after announcing her intention to resign just sixweeks into a disastrous term.
                      “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                      Mark Twain

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        That Little Boris would at some point in time try to stage a come-back,
                        I guess was in the cards.

                        Maybe once the waters had settled a bit, after all there is a saying that memories are short in politics!
                        But to even consider it after less then 4 months...
                        Especially with an uresolved case of "misleading" Parliament hanging over his head!!!
                        https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-s-uk-comeback
                        When we blindly adopt a religion, a political system, a literary dogma, we become automatons. We cease to grow. - Anais Nin

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          It's been done before. Honestly though, normalising it isn't a good thing. We've had a period of likewise here in Australia - there's not many things I'm confident wrt speaking on behalf of others about/for - but I'm sure we'd appreciate it if the present PM went full term. Britain may be too stupid to recover it soon however.
                          Ego Numquam

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Chunder View Post
                            It's been done before. Honestly though, normalising it isn't a good thing. We've had a period of likewise here in Australia - there's not many things I'm confident wrt speaking on behalf of others about/for - but I'm sure we'd appreciate it if the present PM went full term. Britain may be too stupid to recover it soon however.
                            Read yesterday a commentator in the UK said "Liz Truss's term has been consequential. Think, in her 45 days she buried the Queen, the Pound & the Tory Party."
                            “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                            Mark Twain

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Wow, She lasted almost 5 Scaramucci.

                              Comment

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