To maintain his position, Johnson needs to get at least half and one vote of party representatives in his support, that is, at least 180 votes. The prime minister was supported by 211 representatives.
The head of the British government, Boris Johnson, said he was pleased with the decision of the representatives and now the government will be “able to discuss exclusively about matters of concern to the people of Great Britain, and not about the internal strife of politicians.. ” On Monday, June 6, the BBC reports.
He also thanked his colleagues for their support and stressed that all the British government needs now is unity.
“And now is a good time to put behind the controversy within the Conservative Party that has emerged in recent months about my leadership,” he said.
Johnson urged the government to go ahead and focus on things that matter to the people.
function news4481572() {
$.get(‘//’ + window.location.host + ‘/ajax/module.aspx?spm_id=444&id=4481572&lang=2&IsAjax=true’, function (data) { $(‘#nk4481572’).html(data); });
}
news4481572();
It was learned that members of the British Parliament from the Conservative Party, according to the results of a secret ballot, could not declare a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Boris Johnson and he remained head of the British government. At the same time, 211 deputies (59%) voted against Johnson’s resignation, and 148 (41%), on the contrary, supported the resignation.
Asked what he thinks about the fact that 148 Conservative MPs voted against him, Boris Johnson replied that he considered it “a very good result.” He recalled that when he first ran as leader of the Tory party, he did not receive as much support as on June 6.
Recall, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirmed to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky the information about the provision of new military assistance.
Earlier it was learned that Britain will provide Ukraine with the M270 MLRS, with a range of up to 80 km.
News from Athletistic in the Telegram. Subscribe to our channel Athletistic
Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.