Berliner Boersenzeitung - UK Tory MPs hold Johnson's political fate in their hands

EUR -
AED 4.08203
AFN 76.702746
ALL 99.118161
AMD 430.696178
ANG 2.004178
AOA 1036.346547
ARS 1072.749239
AUD 1.626407
AWG 2.003234
AZN 1.879651
BAM 1.957146
BBD 2.245374
BDT 132.891386
BGN 1.955118
BHD 0.418806
BIF 3223.94603
BMD 1.111364
BND 1.4361
BOB 7.701296
BRL 6.154514
BSD 1.112065
BTN 92.900621
BWP 14.642069
BYN 3.638802
BYR 21782.739402
BZD 2.241572
CAD 1.502764
CDF 3189.61578
CHF 0.94199
CLF 0.037168
CLP 1025.578359
CNY 7.822562
CNH 7.823821
COP 4625.220189
CRC 576.696579
CUC 1.111364
CUP 29.451153
CVE 110.340878
CZK 25.147941
DJF 198.028852
DKK 7.458145
DOP 66.815948
DZD 147.307616
EGP 54.126658
ERN 16.670464
ETB 132.576369
FJD 2.43839
FKP 0.846369
GBP 0.832357
GEL 3.017356
GGP 0.846369
GHS 17.493029
GIP 0.846369
GMD 76.683995
GNF 9607.693401
GTQ 8.601993
GYD 232.659994
HKD 8.649131
HNL 27.608986
HRK 7.556178
HTG 146.562106
HUF 394.898794
IDR 16871.231781
ILS 4.214288
IMP 0.846369
INR 92.924333
IQD 1456.814921
IRR 46780.155555
ISK 151.703521
JEP 0.846369
JMD 174.72015
JOD 0.787624
JPY 160.208723
KES 143.455106
KGS 93.632866
KHR 4518.147662
KMF 490.500736
KPW 1000.2272
KRW 1482.809951
KWD 0.339166
KYD 0.926746
KZT 534.712519
LAK 24555.88642
LBP 99585.382179
LKR 338.766008
LRD 222.41495
LSL 19.342802
LTL 3.28157
LVL 0.672253
LYD 5.280703
MAD 10.77501
MDL 19.389334
MGA 5050.473074
MKD 61.506457
MMK 3609.667749
MNT 3776.415689
MOP 8.918513
MRU 44.038284
MUR 51.232565
MVR 17.070873
MWK 1928.326058
MXN 21.543841
MYR 4.637752
MZN 70.960761
NAD 19.342976
NGN 1796.020341
NIO 40.928514
NOK 11.637873
NPR 148.639215
NZD 1.773787
OMR 0.427814
PAB 1.112065
PEN 4.180175
PGK 4.417037
PHP 62.426461
PKR 309.04282
PLN 4.271616
PYG 8656.069376
QAR 4.052287
RON 4.975468
RSD 117.065579
RUB 102.801619
RWF 1500.631944
SAR 4.169803
SBD 9.223575
SCR 15.501332
SDG 668.481652
SEK 11.32489
SGD 1.433871
SHP 0.846369
SLE 25.391676
SLL 23304.747035
SOS 635.537042
SRD 33.824924
STD 23002.996247
SVC 9.730779
SYP 2792.335961
SZL 19.334296
THB 36.623346
TJS 11.821336
TMT 3.889775
TND 3.372819
TOP 2.602923
TRY 37.963275
TTD 7.561268
TWD 35.552357
TZS 3034.024564
UAH 46.046165
UGX 4113.828969
USD 1.111364
UYU 46.282243
UZS 14156.735205
VEF 4025975.399324
VES 40.861655
VND 27350.67432
VUV 131.943397
WST 3.109
XAF 656.408394
XAG 0.036148
XAU 0.000423
XCD 3.003518
XDR 0.822666
XOF 656.41726
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.202274
ZAR 19.289783
ZMK 10003.610157
ZMW 29.497683
ZWL 357.858837
  • RBGPF

    62.3600

    62.36

    +100%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    141.65

    +2.93%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    70.48

    +1.32%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    10.11

    +0.99%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.08

    +0.28%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    25.07

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    1.0100

    64.58

    +1.56%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    35.1

    +0.17%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    13.01

    +0.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    25.005

    -0.06%

  • RELX

    0.8700

    48.86

    +1.78%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.3

    -0.15%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    40.86

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    -1.2400

    77.14

    -1.61%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    37.9

    +1.21%

  • BP

    0.2200

    32.86

    +0.67%

UK Tory MPs hold Johnson's political fate in their hands
UK Tory MPs hold Johnson's political fate in their hands / Photo: Tolga Akmen - AFP

UK Tory MPs hold Johnson's political fate in their hands

Boris Johnson has survived the initial fallout from becoming the first British prime minister to be fined for breaking the law, but his long-term position remains precarious, analysts said Wednesday.

Text size:

The embattled UK leader offered a "full apology" Tuesday after being penalised for breaching Covid lockdown laws by attending a brief celebration of his birthday in 2020, but defied calls to resign.

However, the so-called "partygate" scandal shows little sign of abating.

Johnson faces further possible fines as police continue their probe into numerous rules-breaching events in Downing Street, while his ruling Conservatives look set to be punished in local elections next month.

And once police have concluded their investigation, a senior civil servant's detailed report on the scandal will be published in full, which seems likely to increase the political pressure.

Once-mutinous Conservative MPs have in recent weeks rallied around their leader as the war in Ukraine and the growing cost-of-living crisis diverted attention away from the furore.

But commentators are questioning whether Johnson, 57, can maintain that support if he is repeatedly fined, his party fares poorly in the May 5 nationwide polls and further lurid details of parties emerge.

"A lot more fines and a lot more headlines might change the view of more voters and that in turn might change the mind of Conservative MPs if they do very badly in the elections," Anand Menon, a politics professor at King's College London, told AFP.

"He's clearly willing and able to brazen some things out in a way other, earlier prime ministers probably weren't... I don't think he's superhuman, though."

- 'His fate' -

Johnson's position was hanging by a thread earlier this year following a stream of controversies since last summer that culminated in "partygate" and an increasingly rebellious mood among his MPs.

Several Conservative lawmakers publicly withdrew their support for his leadership, with more reportedly writing letters of no-confidence in him to the party's 1922 Committee.

If the grouping of backbenchers receives at least 54 such letters from Johnson's 360 MPs, it would spark a confidence vote and his possible removal as leader.

"Boris Johnson will remain PM so long as he... retains the confidence of the Conservative group of MPs," Robert Hazell, of University College London's Constitution Unit, explained.

"It is they who will decide his fate."

Johnson is expected to face lawmakers when they return from their Easter break next week to explain why he repeatedly insisted in the House of Commons that no lockdown rules had been broken.

Knowingly misleading parliament is a breach of government ministers' code of conduct, which states they should resign as a result.

Hannah White, of the Institute for Government think tank, told the BBC that Johnson's refusal to do so "puts us in a very difficult situation".

"If it is now henceforth precedent that if you break the law as a minister, you don't automatically have to resign, that's... quite a difficult precedent to have been set," she said.

- 'Anger' -

White noted that Johnson was hoping voters' anger over "partygate" had dissipated.

But Britons across the country made huge sacrifices during the pandemic, including not being able to attend loved one's funerals. Opinion polls suggest that many remain furious at the behaviour in Downing Street.

A snap survey Tuesday by YouGov found 57 percent of respondents thought Johnson should resign after having been fined.

"They are able to see that Boris Johnson has done a good job on Ukraine but that anger about 'partygate' has continued throughout the entire time," James Johnson, a Conservative pollster, told BBC radio.

"I think we're going to see this really light that anger up all over again," he said. It would be "deluded" to think the Tories could avoid fallout from the scandal at the ballot box, he added on Twitter.

London Metropolitan Police, which is conducting the "partygate" probe, said Tuesday over 50 fines had been issued so far. The initial March 29 announcement had referred to just 20.

Johnson's wife Carrie and finance minister Rishi Sunak have also been fined, and the British leader attended several more of the events under investigation.

That has led to a widespread expectation that more fines are imminent -- possibly as voters head to the polls in three weeks.

Sebastian Payne, the Financial Times' Whitehall editor, predicted that a poor Conservative electoral performance paired with the prime minister being fined again could be "the final straw" for its lawmakers.

"If they see electoral evidence that things are not going in their direction and that the 'partygate' situation is causing them to lose votes, that could change their thinking," he told BBC News.

(A.Berg--BBZ)