Dubai Telegraph - 'In the name of God, go!' UK PM defies calls to quit

EUR -
AED 4.241341
AFN 80.25442
ALL 97.342752
AMD 443.23851
ANG 2.066652
AOA 1058.904343
ARS 1490.950388
AUD 1.772999
AWG 2.081433
AZN 1.96315
BAM 1.952981
BBD 2.333582
BDT 141.992391
BGN 1.954873
BHD 0.435303
BIF 3397.845845
BMD 1.154748
BND 1.487968
BOB 7.987092
BRL 6.440609
BSD 1.155757
BTN 100.271585
BWP 15.645497
BYN 3.782002
BYR 22633.059836
BZD 2.321729
CAD 1.590261
CDF 3337.221787
CHF 0.930959
CLF 0.02828
CLP 1109.412693
CNY 8.287511
CNH 8.292713
COP 4781.072226
CRC 584.069454
CUC 1.154748
CUP 30.600821
CVE 110.797631
CZK 24.611719
DJF 205.222168
DKK 7.464377
DOP 70.439501
DZD 150.842386
EGP 56.163358
ERN 17.321219
ETB 159.579805
FJD 2.604994
FKP 0.862278
GBP 0.864618
GEL 3.117944
GGP 0.862278
GHS 12.125695
GIP 0.862278
GMD 83.142115
GNF 9995.498018
GTQ 8.868658
GYD 241.807198
HKD 9.064315
HNL 30.42781
HRK 7.53554
HTG 151.573806
HUF 399.739139
IDR 18909.459593
ILS 3.890057
IMP 0.862278
INR 100.529181
IQD 1512.719816
IRR 48629.312335
ISK 142.23065
JEP 0.862278
JMD 185.16269
JOD 0.818713
JPY 171.466213
KES 149.542168
KGS 100.828431
KHR 4642.087103
KMF 492.490626
KPW 1039.22449
KRW 1603.182607
KWD 0.352764
KYD 0.963164
KZT 627.790874
LAK 24913.687516
LBP 103394.151992
LKR 349.183462
LRD 232.104942
LSL 20.658612
LTL 3.409671
LVL 0.698495
LYD 6.24714
MAD 10.496084
MDL 19.723636
MGA 5115.533533
MKD 61.474447
MMK 2423.826129
MNT 4146.14915
MOP 9.345634
MRU 45.982233
MUR 53.223015
MVR 17.780345
MWK 2005.22239
MXN 21.637089
MYR 4.889782
MZN 73.857808
NAD 20.65852
NGN 1767.503062
NIO 42.436635
NOK 11.788758
NPR 160.438498
NZD 1.939237
OMR 0.444001
PAB 1.155821
PEN 4.102238
PGK 4.794541
PHP 66.189859
PKR 326.851579
PLN 4.28562
PYG 8656.952221
QAR 4.204149
RON 5.077083
RSD 117.181518
RUB 93.814309
RWF 1662.837049
SAR 4.331228
SBD 9.519931
SCR 16.334042
SDG 693.429443
SEK 11.146505
SGD 1.48755
SHP 0.907451
SLE 26.558836
SLL 24214.491712
SOS 659.935258
SRD 42.377991
STD 23900.951155
STN 24.769344
SVC 10.112839
SYP 15013.448685
SZL 20.658217
THB 37.402643
TJS 11.009364
TMT 4.053165
TND 3.343042
TOP 2.704533
TRY 46.85679
TTD 7.844845
TWD 34.247169
TZS 2967.702256
UAH 48.318338
UGX 4143.19808
USD 1.154748
UYU 46.24564
UZS 14549.824356
VES 141.672851
VND 30283.26501
VUV 137.764886
WST 3.167934
XAF 655.062376
XAG 0.030226
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.120764
XCG 2.082983
XDR 0.800713
XOF 645.503829
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.890322
ZAR 20.675994
ZMK 10394.113228
ZMW 26.555733
ZWL 371.828369
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.2200

    23.12

    +0.95%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    22.61

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    -0.3400

    10.51

    -3.24%

  • BCC

    -0.6000

    86.14

    -0.7%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.06

    +0.23%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    70.52

    +0.28%

  • RIO

    0.0800

    62.27

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    0.2200

    37.67

    +0.58%

  • RBGPF

    3.6700

    77.55

    +4.73%

  • AZN

    2.1500

    73.98

    +2.91%

  • BTI

    0.9900

    52.77

    +1.88%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    23.66

    -0.72%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    13.38

    +1.79%

  • RELX

    0.1500

    51.92

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    11.11

    -0.45%

  • BP

    0.2900

    32.96

    +0.88%

'In the name of God, go!' UK PM defies calls to quit
'In the name of God, go!' UK PM defies calls to quit

'In the name of God, go!' UK PM defies calls to quit

A defiant Boris Johnson vowed Wednesday to remain British premier and contest the next election as calls for his resignation snowballed and a former Brexit minister demanded he quit 'in the name of God'.

Text size:

Despite the dramatic defection of one Conservative MP to the opposition Labour party, Johnson insisted he would win any no-confidence vote called by his ruling Conservative party.

Many in the Tory party and the country at large are furious at revelations that Downing Street staff were partying while the rest of the country was in strict lockdown against Covid.

"You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing," Conservative grandee David Davis told his leader in the House of Commons on Wednesday. "In the name of God, go!"

The former cabinet minister, who quit as Brexit secretary in Theresa May's government, has become Johnson's most high-profile opponent since the prime minister gave a much-derided TV interview on Tuesday.

Davis's quote invokes a celebrated quotation from parliamentary history.

The line was first spoken by Civil War leader Oliver Cromwell in 1653, then repeated by another Tory in 1940 to prime minister Neville Chamberlain, who was replaced by Johnson's hero Winston Churchill.

Johnson on Wednesday tried to regain the political initiative by announcing he was lifting most Covid restrictions in England, with a wave of Omicron infections apparently fading.

But he faces an uphill battle, with Labour riding high and inflation reaching a near 30-year peak stoking public concern about the cost of living.

- Tears for fears? -

Seven Tories have publicly called on Johnson to quit and more than 20 others were reported to have coalesced in an organised revolt. Among them are several who won office in Johnson's landslide December 2019 election win on a promise to deliver Britain's EU departure.

A new poll commissioned by TV network Channel 4 said many of the 2019 Tory intake would be wiped out in a future election if Johnson remains and gave Labour an 11-point lead overall.

Just minutes before Johnson faced Labour leader Keir Starmer in parliament, Conservative MP Christian Wakeford announced a shock move to the opposition party.

Wakeford said in a letter to Johnson that "you and the Conservative Party as a whole have shown themselves incapable of offering the leadership and government this country deserves".

He represents the seat of Bury South near Manchester, one of 45 constituencies across northern England that Johnson's Tories captured from a shellshocked Labour party in 2019.

As a laughing Starmer pointed to Wakeford sitting in the Labour ranks at Prime Minister's Questions, Johnson shrugged off the blow.

"The Conservative party won Bury South for the first time in generations under this prime minister... and we will win again in Bury South at the next election under this prime minister," Johnson said.

The next election is due in 2024, and a spokeswoman for the prime minister insisted that he would also fight any no-confidence vote.

- 'Pork pie plot' -

"He's entirely focused on his job and on delivering for the British public," she told reporters, while denying reports that Johnson had broken down in tears during one crunch meeting with backbenchers.

Starmer said Johnson was "defending the indefensible" over the parties, including two held as Britain was in mourning for Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth II's consort for seven decades.

Criticism of Johnson intensified after he gave his interview on Tuesday, in which he claimed not to be aware that at least one "bring your own booze" event in Downing Street would breach the Covid lockdown rules that he had set.

Afterwards, the group of more than 20 Tory MPs reportedly met to air their concerns about Johnson's leadership.

Their bid to unseat the prime minister was dubbed the "pork pie plot" because one of the MPs involved represents Melton Mowbray, a town in central England known for making the pastry-covered meat products.

"Pork pies" is also Cockney rhyming slang for "lies" -- which most voters believe Johnson is guilty of spreading over the "partygate" affair, according to several opinion polls.

At least 54 Tory MPs need to send letters calling for the prime minister's resignation to trigger a party leadership challenge.

Andrew Bridgen, a pro-Brexit MP And one of the seven rebels who have gone public, said the threshold in the secretive process could be reached "this week" and a vote held early next week.

In parliament, Johnson again urged all sides to await the findings of an inquiry he has ordered into the Downing Street parties.

K.Al-Zaabi--DT