‘Last chance saloon’ for Boris
Boris Johnson has been warned by ministers he is on his last chance after Downing Street was forced to apologise to the Queen over new allegations of lockdown parties.
Boris Johnson has been warned by ministers he is on his last chance after Downing Street was forced to apologise to the Queen over new allegations of lockdown parties.
The Queen, a scandalous son and Boris Johnson. It’s just not cricket.
As ministers distance themselves from the Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss are blasted for suspiciously late messages of support.
The ‘Partygate’ rage is palpable. People can unleash on how wretched restrictions were by raging at Boris Johnson.
‘Partygate’ the latest in list of damning misjudgments by UK PM.
Within minutes of apologising to the Commons over a party in the garden of No 10 during the first lockdown, Boris Johnson had a somewhat different message for Tory MPs in the tearoom.
Such is the Labour left’s loathing for Keir Starmer and their vituperative rejection of him that they may soon have to leave the party. That could be the icing on the leader’s cake.
The British PM apologises for attending a lockdown-breaching party held in his Downing Street garden but deflects calls to resign.
Cabinet ministers tell Boris Johnson to ‘take his medicine’ and apologise for Downing Street party: ‘everyone knows this happened’.
Police contact the British government over evidence one of Boris Johnson’s most senior officials invited dozens of staff to a drinks party during a national lockdown.
Adviser considered quitting after learning the PM withheld critical messages about payment for refurbishment of his Downing St flat.
With the British Conservative Party fractious over Covid curbs and unforced political errors, Boris Johnson must seek to restore his authority in some pressing issues.
A poll suggests that Boris Johnson would lose not only a general election but even his own seat
John Caudwell, who donated £500,000 to the Tories before the last UK election hit out at Boris Johnson’s ‘mistakes and faux pas’.
Even now the PM holds the upper hand, not least because a no-confidence vote would prompt ministers to stand by him.
With the departure of a key ally and his government in disarray, there are questions in the Tory party over whether the problem is with those surrounding Boris Johnson or the PM himself.
Boris Johnson’s leadership fell deeper into crisis after one of his closest advisers quit the cabinet, topping a torrid week for the British Prime Minister.
Threats to his leadership, further revelations about parties and a new Covid crisis — the British Prime Minister has little to celebrate
Britain’s Prime Minister is facing a double crisis.
The rebellion by almost 100 Tory MPs was far worse than even pessimists in Downing Street had predicted.
Conservative MPs should recognise that by rejecting coronavirus curbs they were judging Boris Johnson incapable, and declaring the need for a different PM.
Nearly 100 Tory MPs voted against new Covid restrictions, as Boris Johnson battles to control his party, and an Omicron outbreak.
Someone has to sort this, before Boris Johnson orders an investigation into why he wanted an investigation.
Boris Johnson’s party must move sooner rather than later to replace him.
Chaos is in Boris Johnson’s DNA. But amid Partygate and fresh Covid crisis, even MPs who owe him their jobs wonder what’s next.
Boris Johnson has warned of a looming “tidal wave” of Omicron, and has ordered booster jabs to be brought forward by a month.
Someone decent needs to stand up and rid us of Boris Johnson but British Conservatives are championing an empty vessel in Liz Truss
Pictures emerge of the PM taking part in a Christmas quiz in No.10 last year, as households were locked down under Covid restrictions.
Labour has a four-percentage point lead, its biggest since January when the country was in the middle of the winter lockdown.
This Christmas was supposed to restore Boris Johnson’s relationship with his party and the public. New restrictions threaten both.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/topics/boris-johnson/page/10