three new resignations in Boris Johnson’s government

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on September 7, 2021.

Resignations continue in the British government. Wednesday July 6, the day after the resounding departures of the ministers of health and finance, the secretary of state responsible for children and the family, the minister responsible for school standards and the assistant to the secretary of state for transport announced their departure from the government, further weakening Prime Minister Boris Johnson, entangled in a wave of scandals.

The Secretary of State for Children and Families, Will Quince, judged that he had no ” no choice “, after repeating ” in good faith “ in the media elements provided by the Prime Minister’s office “which turned out to be inaccurate”. The assistant to the Secretary of State for Transport, Laura Trott, for her part, resigned, judging that confidence was “lost”. The minister responsible for school standards, Robin Walker, has, for his part, explained that his decision stemmed from his regret that the Conservative Party had “was diverted from its primary mission because of constant questions about its management team”.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers UK: Pressure mounts on Boris Johnson after series of cabinet resignations

Repeated scandals

Tuesday evening, the ministers of health, Sajid Javid, and finance, Rishi Sunak, announced their resignation a few minutes apart, tired of the repeated scandals that have shaken the government for months.

These resignations come as the Prime Minister has just apologized for having appointed Chris Pincher to his government in February, whip Deputy Chief of Parliamentary Discipline for Conservative MPs. The latter was accused of touching several men, information which Downing Street had known since 2019 but which the Prime Minister said he had “forgotten”, by naming it.

Former Brexit Secretary David Frost, who also resigned in December, said their departures were justified and called on Boris Johnson to resign before the situation worsened. Ministers loyal to him reaffirmed their support, such as Nadine Dorries, in charge of culture. He’s sometimes “easy to get away”but “much more difficult” to implement reforms for the country, Nadhim Zahawi said on SkyNews on Wednesday.

“Summer of Discontent”

Weakened but determined to stay, Boris Johnson will defend his post at noon in Parliament (1 p.m. in Paris) during the weekly session of questions to the Prime Minister, which promises to be electric. Already considerably weakened by the Downing Street party scandal during the pandemic, he had, however, survived a vote of no confidence from his own camp a few weeks ago.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers “Partygate”: Boris Johnson wins the confidence of Conservative MPs, but comes out of the vote very weak

The economic context is, moreover, particularly delicate, with inflation at its highest for forty years, at 9.1% in May over twelve months. After a historic strike by railway workers at the end of June, the unions have already called for a “summer of discontent” and several professions – lawyers, health workers, teachers – have called for social movements.

According to a poll by the YouGov institute on Tuesday evening, 69% of British voters believe that Boris Johnson should resign. More than half (54%) of 2019 Conservative voters believe the Prime Minister should leave office.

Read also Article reserved for our subscribers A year of drifting at 10 Downing Street

The World with AFP

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here