Boris Johnson vows ‘Sick be again’ as ex-prime minister formally resigns as MP

Boris Johnson vows ‘Sick be again’ as ex-prime minister formally resigns as MP

A defiant Boris Johnson vowed “I’ll be back” as he referred to as on the Tories to ship on Brexit and the guarantees of the 2019 manifesto.

The former prime minister hinted at a political comeback on the day he formally resigned as an MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip.

In a message within the Daily Express on Monday evening he stated: “We must fully deliver on Brexit and on the 2019 manifesto. We must smash Labour at the next election.

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“Nothing lower than absolute victory and complete Brexit will do – and because the nice Arnold Schwarzenegger stated, I’ll be again.”

Mr Johnson introduced his intention to give up as an MP on Friday upfront of a report from the privileges committee, which was investigating whether or not he lied to MPs about lockdown events in Downing Street.

The cross-party Tory-majority panel, which is chaired by veteran Labour MP Harriet Harman, was anticipated to search out he had intentionally misled parliament and advocate a suspension which may set off a by-election.

The shock resignation got here hours after his long-awaited honours checklist was revealed, missing the names of sitting MPs together with former tradition secretary Nadine Dorries and former minister Nigel Adams.

Rishi Sunak now faces three by-elections at a time when the Conservatives are trailing behind Labour within the polls.

Mr Johnson’s camp accused Mr Sunak of getting “secretly blocked” their peerages to keep away from the doubtless damaging electoral assessments – one thing Downing Street has strenuously denied.

The feud between the previous allies erupted right into a bitter public slanging match on Monday, because the prime minister claimed his predecessor requested him to overrule a panel vetting his nominations to the House of Lords.

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Mr Sunak stated Mr Johnson wished him “to do something I wasn’t prepared to do”, which was “to either overrule the Holac [House of Lords Appointments] committee or make promises to people”.

Hours later, the previous Tory chief hit again with a fiery assertion of his personal accusing the PM of “talking rubbish”.

Mr Johnson stated: “Rishi Sunak is talking rubbish. To honour these peerages it was not necessary to overrule Holac – but simply to ask them to renew their vetting, which was a mere formality.”

This line of assault was echoed by Ms Dorries, who claimed in an interview with Piers Morgan that she had her peerage “duplicity and cruelly ” snatched away from her by “privileged posh boys” and that she resigned as a result of she was being “bullied” by Number 10.

In response, Downing Street repeated its insistence that Mr Sunak had “no involvement or input into the approved list”.

As the drama unfolded, Labour MP Chris Bryant, chair of parliament’s requirements committee, tweeted: “Purely puerile was how I described Johnson’s hissy fit resignation. I hadn’t thought it would be followed by pathetic playground antics by both Sunak and Johnson arguing over who’s lying and who started it.”

Partygate report ‘anticipated on Wednesday after printing points’

While lots of Mr Johnson’s allies will possible welcome his intention to return to frontline politics, pundits have solid doubt on the chance of this taking place earlier than the following normal election, whereas a YouGov ballot has urged the vast majority of the general public (56%) don’t need him to come back again as an MP.

It comes because the panel of MPs analyzing claims that Mr Johnson lied to parliament over “partygate” is poised to ship a damning verdict on Wednesday.

Members of the committee met at the moment to finalise their report however points with printing exhausting copies imply that they want an additional day earlier than it is able to be revealed, Sky News understands.

In a report anticipated to be hard-hitting, the inquiry is believed to have discovered that Mr Johnson not solely made recklessly inaccurate statements within the Commons over partygate, but in addition intentionally lied to MPs.

It has been urged that – earlier than Mr Johnson’s resignation as an MP – the committee had been discussing a 20-day suspension, triggering a recall petition and potential by-election.

He can’t be suspended now he has resigned, however he may very well be refused a parliamentary cross supplied to former MPs, a sanction imposed on former speaker John Bercow after a bullying report.

Content Source: information.sky.com