British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was clinging to power Thursday, despite more than 50 resignations from his government, including Northern Ireland minister Brandon Lewis.
Lewis on Thursday became the fourth cabinet minister to resign, writing in a letter published on his Twitter account that Johnson was “past the point of no return.”
The Conservative leader on Wednesday defiantly responded to calls from his loyalists and cabinet colleagues to step down by sacking minister and former top ally Michael Gove.
The Communities Secretary was reportedly the first to tell him that he must resign for the good of the Tory party and country, with a source close to Johnson telling the BBC that Gove was “a snake.”
Gove was Johnson’s right-hand man in Britain’s 2016 Brexit referendum campaign, but dramatically chose to run against him for the Conservative leadership that same year, and again in 2019.
The Sun newspaper said Johnson had told colleagues they would have to “dip (their) hands in blood” to push him out of office.
Allies of the prime minister said he was going to “fight on,” with his parliamentary private secretary (PPS) James Duddridge telling Sky News Johnson was in a “buoyant mood.”
But on Thursday morning, the front pages of British newspapers highlighted the apparently hopeless position the scandal-hit leader was in.
The normally staunchly pro-Conservative Daily Express spoke of Johnson’s “last stand,” with the Daily Telegraph calling Johnson “mortally wounded,” and The Times saying Johnson was “fight(ing) for his life.”
The shock resignations of finance chief Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid late Tuesday set off a chain of others.
They quit after Johnson apologised for appointing as deputy chief whip senior Conservative MP Chris Pincher, who was forced to step down following accusations he drunkenly groped two men.
Days of shifting explanations had followed Pincher’s resignation, with Downing Street at first denying Johnson knew of the prior allegations – a defense that collapsed after a former top civil servant said he was told in 2019 about another incident.
Tory critics said the Pincher affair had tipped many over the edge, angry at having to defend what they saw as more lies by Johnson.
Johnson was confronted by members of his cabinet on Wednesday when he returned to Downing Street from a lengthy grilling by a parliamentary committee.
The delegation was said to include hardline interior minister Priti Patel and Nadhim Zahawi, who has barely been 24 hours in his new job as Sunak’s successor – though Johnson’s PPS Duddridge later denied Zahawi was there.
A third member of Johnson’s cabinet – Welsh Secretary Simon Hart – quit on Wednesday evening.