Johnson and Sunak: suspicions grow of squalid deal on Commons vote
Is the PM’s choice to abstain from the vote evidence that Boris has sought a truce with Sunak?
Is the PM’s choice to abstain from the vote evidence that Boris has sought a truce with Sunak?
The utterly scathing verdict of the majority-Tory committee was that Johnson’s behaviour amounted to “an attack on democratic institutions”.
No amount of evidence, in the form of opinion polling, will persuade Johnson’s die-hard supporters that their hero is no longer popular.
Speculation is swirling about just how much HarperCollins has paid for the rights.
Truss’ firm couldn’t keep its nerve. Now, Sunak’s the daddy; he runs London, he runs the country.
Boris may be out but Penny Mordaunt is showing no sign of backing down to Sunak yet.
it looks as though Johnson really is running for the Tory leadership in the wake of the resignation of Liz Truss.
The main calculation seems to be whether keeping a leader in place is good or bad for each individual’s immediate prospects, never mind the national interest
This weekend will be one of the most frantic and intense in recent British political history as 357 Tory MPs plot and scheme to decide on which of the three candidates they will back in Monday’s leadership contest.
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