Prime Minister Boris Johnson will step down as leader of the Conservative Party on Thursday, the BBC reported as government departures surge.
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The prime minister will also make “a statement to the country later today,” a Downing Street spokesman said.
According to the BBC, Mr Johnson will step down as leader of the Conservative Party, but might remain Prime Minister until the fall, when a new leader is elected from among the Conservatives.
Opposition leader Keir Starmer said it was “good news”, but that “we don’t need a change in the leadership of the Tories. We need a real change of government”.
The announcement comes as nearly 60 departures have been announced in the government since Tuesday, including five ministers, an exodus of unprecedented speed in British political history.
Discontent had been simmering for months, fueled by the scandal of illegal parties in Downing Street during the anti-COVID lockdown.
The resignations on Tuesday evening of Finance Minister Rishi Sunak, and Health Minister Sajid Javid, had sounded the hallali for the Prime Minister, following a new sex scandal involving the “whip” deputy responsible for the discipline of Conservative MPs, whom Mr Johnson had named in February, ‘forgetting’ past similar charges.