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Boris Johnson in weakened position after week of turmoil

Boris

It was a hard lesson for Richard Nixon to learn, and Boris Johnson may very well learn it the hard way too, and that is, when you do something that the people of your nation may be upset with, openly admit it, own it, and take your public lumps, but instead the British Prime Minister chose in the beginning to just blow it off. Now, just like Nixon, Johnson is fighting for his political life, and the lessons are coming almost too fast to learn, but in retrospect Britain’s leader will discover that the people one governs do not like to be lied to, and do not like seeing government officials do things the public is banned from doing. As reported by the AP:

Johnson was rocked Thursday by the resignation of his policy chief, Munira Mirza, a trusted adviser who worked with him for more than a decade

LONDON (AP) — This was the week British Prime Minister Boris Johnson hoped to get a grip on his government after weeks of scandal. By Friday, he was struggling to hang on after a scathing report on lockdown-breaching parties and the departure of several top aides.

A worker sweeps in the rain and a police officer stands guard outside the door of 10 Downing Street, in London, Friday, Feb. 4, 2022. Four of Boris Johnson’s most senior staff quit on Thursday, with a fifth staff member resigning on Friday morning, triggering new turmoil for the embattled British prime minister. Johnson’s grip on power has been shaken by revelations that his staff held “bring your own booze” office parties, birthday celebrations and “wine time Fridays” in 2020 and 2021 while millions in Britain were barred from meeting with friends and family during coronavirus lockdowns. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

Johnson was rocked Thursday by the resignation of his policy chief, Munira Mirza, a trusted adviser who worked with him for more than a decade. Mirza stood by the prime minister amid “partygate” revelations that Johnson and his staff broke the rules they had imposed on the country. But she said Johnson’s “scurrilous accusation” this week that an opposition leader had failed to stop a notorious pedophile was the final straw.

“This was not the normal cut-and-thrust of politics; it was an inappropriate and partisan reference to a horrendous case of child sex abuse,” Mirza wrote in a resignation letter, which was published by The Spectator magazine.

After Mirza quit, Boris Johnson’s office announced the departure of three more top staffers: chief of staff Dan Rosenfield, communications director Jack Doyle and principal private secretary Martin Reynolds. Elena Narozanski, who worked in Murza’s policy unit, resigned Friday.

Conservative lawmakers loyal to Johnson depicted the departures as part of a planned overhaul to restore order to his 10 Downing Street office.

“The prime minister was absolutely clear on Monday that there would be changes at the top of No. 10 and that is what he has delivered,” Energy Minister Greg Hands said. “This is the prime minister taking charge.”

Others weren’t so sure. The prime minister’s grip on power has been shaken by public anger at revelations that his staff held “bring your own booze” office parties, birthday celebrations and “wine time Fridays” at times in 2020 and 2021 while millions in Britain were barred from meeting with friends and family because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Boris
In this photo made available by UK Parliament, Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks in the Houses of Commons, London, Monday Jan. 31, 2022. Boris Johnson apologized for lockdown-flouting parties at 10 Downing Street and insisted that he and his government can be trusted. Johnson told lawmakers in the House of Commons on Monday that he would make changes to the way the government is run in the wake of the “partygate” scandal. (Jessica Taylor/UK Parliament via AP)

A total of 16 parties have been investigated by a senior civil servant, Sue Gray, with a dozen of them also under investigation by the Metropolitan Police.

On Monday, Gray released an interim report looking at the four parties police are not probing. She found that “failures of leadership and judgment” allowed events to occur that “should not have been allowed to take place” and described a Downing Street operation marked by excessive drinking and dysfunctional dynamics.

Boris Johnson apologized and pledged to fix the problems in his office, though he didn’t admit personal wrongdoing.

Rosenfield, Doyle and especially Reynolds — who sent 100 government staff an invitation to a BYOB garden party in May 2020 — were always likely to be ousted as part of Johnson’s post-“partygate” shakeup.

But Mirza’s departure was a major blow. In her resignation letter, she said Johnson had not heeded her advice to apologize for accusing Labour Party leader Keir Starmer in the House of Commons on Monday of “failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile” when Starmer was the U.K.’s director of public prosecutions. Savile was a long-time presenter of youth television shows who was exposed after his death in 2011 as a sexual predator who had abused hundreds of children.

Starmer said the accusation was “a ridiculous slur peddled by right-wing trolls.” A 2013 report found that Starmer hadn’t been involved in decisions about whether Savile should be prosecuted.

A television camera covered from the rain points towards the front door of 10 Downing Street, in London, Friday, Feb. 4, 2022. Four of Boris Johnson’s most senior staff quit on Thursday, with a fifth staff member resigning on Friday morning, triggering new turmoil for the embattled British prime minister. Johnson’s grip on power has been shaken by revelations that his staff held “bring your own booze” office parties, birthday celebrations and “wine time Fridays” in 2020 and 2021 while millions in Britain were barred from meeting with friends and family during coronavirus lockdowns. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

Some Conservatives also recoiled at the use of Savile in a political attack. In her resignation letter, Mirza said Johnson had let himself down “by making a scurrilous accusation against the leader of the opposition.”

The Downing Street exodus is sending further shockwaves through Conservative lawmakers as they mull whether to seek a no-confidence vote in the leader who won them a big parliamentary majority just over two years ago. Under party rules, such a vote is triggered if 15% of party lawmakers — currently 54 people — write letters calling for one. If Boris Johnson lost such a vote, he would be replaced as party leader and prime minister.

Only about a dozen Conservative legislators have publicly called for Johnson to quit, though the number who have written letters may be higher. Many others are biding their time, waiting to see whether police censure the prime minister and what Gray will say in her final report, due once the criminal investigation is over.

Huw Merriman, a moderate Conservative lawmaker, said the prime minister had to shape up or ship out.

“My constituents are upset,” he told the BBC. “I feel like we’ve lost face and public trust with them. We’ve got to gain that back.”

By JILL LAWLESS

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