LONDON, United Kingdom: Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Tuesday apologized to parliamentarians after he became the first British leader fined for violating the law, but facing opposition calls to stop for integrity in politics.
Overcoming the parliament for the first time since April 12 it was fine, he insisted that he did not think he had made a mistake when he attended an office gathered for his birthday in June 2020, when England was under the pandemic kuncian.
“That’s my mistake and I’m sorry because it’s unconditional,” he said.
The British public “has the right to expect better than their prime minister” Johnson added, while insisting he would continue the work including to defend Ukraine against the invasion of Russian “Barbaris”.
The prison problem caused accusations that Johnson tried to bury the controversy over a fine of “partygate” – which also had overflowed by the Minister of Finance and his wife.
Johnson has not been able to receive a further fine of various street parties held despite being charged by the strict Coronavirus government imposed by his own government over the past two years.
Parliamentarians will hold a special debate on Thursday whether he misleads the House of Commons when, in December, he denied ever breaking the rules. He will make an official visit to India at that time.
Parliament who consciously mislead is a violation of the government’s code of ethics, which states that they must resign as a result – and the opposition parliamentary members insist he must leave.
But asked directly whether he deliberately misled the parliament, Johnson firmly answered: “No.”
Keer Starmer Opposition Labor leader said there was cross party support for British support for Ukraine, and every conservative successor would continue Johnson’s war policy.
Starmer tells the experience of one public member who, because Covid rules later, was rejected the opportunity to hold his wife’s hand in the hospital.
Johnson was “a man without shame” supported by “nodding dogs” in his cabinet, said Starmer, urged conservative parliament members to issue their leaders.
They must “bring courtesy, honesty, and integrity back into our politics and stop the explanation of this country”, said labor leaders.
‘Liar’
One of the national surveys suggested around two-thirds of the public speak negatively about Johnson, compared to only 16 percent positive, with the word “liar” the most common response.
“Overall, ‘partygate’ dominates Boris’s view over Ukraine,” James Johnson said, a conservative polban who did a sample.
“Anger hasn’t receded. Many negative comments are by people who like it before but now have changed the mind.”
Voters will get their chance to give a verdict on May 5, when Britain holds national elections for local councils and cities.
Drubbing for conservatives can then sharpen the debate among his own parliamentarians, some of which say that now is not the time to change the leader given the war in Ukraine.
Simon Wolfson, a Minister of Justice, has resigned from the government, citing the “scale, context and properties of violations.
Johnson will bid to support his position with a backbenchers when he spoke at a meeting of the conservative parliamentary party on Tuesday night.
But one senior Tory backbencher, Mark Harper, responded to Johnson in Commons that he was “no longer … worthy of” being the prime minister after his apology.