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News ID: 99244
Publish Date : 24 January 2022 - 21:45

British PM Fights for Job as Scandal Grows

LONDON (Reuters) -- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was fighting to shore up his premiership on Monday as he faced the publication later this week of an investigation into boozy parties at the heart of the British state during COVID-19 lockdowns.
Johnson, who in 2019 won the biggest Conservative majority in more than 30 years, is now assailed by scandal, facing claims that he and his staff partied during the worst pandemic for a century and a new accusation of racist discrimination in his party.
The results of an official investigation by Cabinet Office official Sue Gray into the lockdown parties is due to be published later this week.
Johnson has given a variety of explanations about the parties: first he said no rules had been broken but then he apologized to the British people for the apparent hypocrisy of such gatherings.
Police officers who guard Downing Street have been interviewed by Gray and have given “extremely damning” evidence, The Telegraph newspaper reported, citing an unidentified source.
“Johnson has completely lost his authority,” Nick Timothy, who served as Downing Street chief of staff to Johnson’s Conservative predecessor Theresa May, wrote in The Telegraph.
“The collapse in Johnson’s authority is causing widespread political dysfunction and further danger for the Conservatives,” he said. “Johnson is no longer popular, he is no longer powerful. “
Johnson has denied an allegation that he was told a “bring your own booze” lockdown gathering on May 20, 2020, which he says he thought was a work event, was inappropriate.
His former senior adviser Dominic Cummings - now a harsh critic - is due to be interviewed on Monday.
Toppling Johnson would leave Britain in limbo for months just as the West deals with the Ukraine crisis and the world’s fifth largest economy grapples with a once-in-a-generation inflationary wave triggered by the pandemic.
To trigger a leadership challenge, 54 of the 359 Conservative MPs in parliament must write letters of no confidence to the chairman of the party’s 1922 Committee.
Leading rivals within the Conservative Party include Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak, 41, and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, 46.
Johnson on Monday ordered an inquiry into claims by a lawmaker who said she was fired from a ministerial job in the government partly because her Muslim faith was making colleagues uncomfortable.
Nusrat Ghani, 49, who lost her job as a junior transport minister in February 2020, told the Sunday Times that she had been told by a “whip” - an enforcer of parliamentary discipline - that her “Muslimness” had been raised as an issue in her sacking.