Humiliated by his party over Afghanistan, the prime minister’s lack of foreign policy strategy is becoming a political problem

When the government first drew up plans to axe the virtual parliament and bring MPs back to the Commons chamber, ministers argued that it would boost support for the prime minister. Boris Johnson tends to work best with a crowd, so events such as prime minister’s questions were trickier when only a handful of Tory MPs were allowed in the chamber.

But when Conservative politicians turned up en masse to the Commons on Wednesday to debate the situation in Afghanistan, the opposite proved true. Rather than provide supportive interventions, Johnson soon discovered his biggest critics were sitting right behind him.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Tory MPs ‘pleading’ with Reform UK not to stand against them in election

Party leader Richard Tice also says Nigel Farage will play formal role…

When will Omicron peak in the UK and is the modelling wrong?

Gloomiest predictions may have not come to pass, but experts caution that…

‘He beat me many times’: how trafficked women are sexually exploited in UK

Victims reveal broken promises, physical and verbal abuse and almost constant surveillance…