“And I’ve today appointed a Cabinet to serve, as I will, until a new leader is in place.”
The only meaning these words can have is that a new leader can now be put in place.
And the only way this can happen is for him to cease to be leader.
With his statement yesterday, Johnson – at a stroke – lost control of the process.
As and when the parliamentary Conservative party choose a new leader, that new leader will be invited by the Queen to form a new government.
Johnson does not need to do anything more.
He will cease to be Prime Minister by automatic operation of the constitution.
Under the current rules of his parliamentary party, he also cannot stand for election in the new contest.
All this means is that should now just a question of time before there is a new Prime Minister.
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Can he renege on his resignation?
One fear is that he may seek to renege on his resignation – to change his mind.
He can certainly purport to do that – and it is not impossible that he will try.
But.
It would not be a matter for him – it would be a matter for the 1922 Committee.
Again, the situation is no longer under his control.
For this to happen would require (a) for him to (purport) to (somehow) rescind his resignation and (b) that rescission to be accepted by the 1922 Committee.
There is perhaps a possibility that the 1922 Committee may agree to this, but that would be their collective decision, and not his.
And if the 1922 Committee did not agree to the rescission, then the process would continue, a new leader will be selected and asked to form a government, and Johnson will still cease to be Prime Minister.
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What if, what if?
Of course, there are various possible situations that could happen between now and Johnson ceasing to be Prime Minister.
The conflict with Russia could escalate; there could be a new pandemic, or a new wave of the current pandemic; the Queen may die; and so on.
Johnson may wish to contrive an emergency, or there may be a genuine emergency.
It may well be that a development is so immense that Johnson may say he should continue in office.
But.
In every conceivable scenario, we come back to the same point: it would not ultimately be a matter for him.
Yesterday he lost ultimate control of his political fate and there is no situation which means he regains that control.
It may be that Johnson hangs on, hoping something will turn up which will mean he can carry on – and this is plausible.
He is a cynical opportunist.
But, if that was to happen, it would require others to decide that to be the case, and not just him.
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Sooner rather than later?
There are strong – if not overwhelming – arguments that Johnson should go sooner rather than later.
This is a politician who cannot be trusted.
The highly important disclosure that Johnson met with a ‘former’ KGB spy as Foreign Secretary during a security crisis and without officials is just one of many reasons why he should no longer be Prime Minister.
However, the constitutional position is not straightforward.
There is no formal role of ‘acting’ Prime Minister – it is a binary position, either you are Prime Minister or you are not.
There is some precedent for someone to come in as a ‘caretaker’ – in 1834 the former Prime Minister the Duke of Wellington headed a caretaker ministry until the new Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel could return from abroad.
And there is one former Conservative Prime Minister still in parliament, Theresa May.
Imagine that.
Others have suggested that the current deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab could be an interim Prime Minister.
In the meantime, there are rules and conventions that apply to lame duck Prime Ministers, which applied in the last days of the premierships of Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Theresa May.
Here see the commentary of the peerless Dr Catherine Haddon:
But merely me typing – and you reading – ‘rules and conventions’ in the context of the departing Prime Minister Boris Johnson make one realise their limits in this particular case.
That said: so far, one day later, it looks as if Johnson and those who have agreed to serve in his cabinet are abiding by those rules and conventions.
And it an inescapable fact that the Conservative Party do need to have a new leader – and some of the candidates are not the sort you would want to rush into premiership.
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Of piglets and grease
None of the above means that the ‘greased piglet’ will definitely now leave the premiership.
It just means that it is no longer solely the decision of Boris Johnson.
His cynical opportunism in and of itself will not be enough.
And it may well be that his cynical opportunistic mind is already moving on – and there will be personal advantage in him leaving the House with its (for him) irksome rules on financial disclosure and its (for him) dangerous committees investigating his conduct.
And any bad conduct now may also limit his last remaining source of patronage bounty – the resignation honours list.
Johnson is many things, but he is not stupid.
He is calculating.
You may recall that in 2019 many feared that he would breach the Benn Act and not ask for an Article 50 extension.
But, in the end, faced with an absolute obstacle, the bravado bullishness fell away – and the cynical opportunist adjusted to the situation.
And yesterday, he similarly did not push the situation so as to ‘fight on’.
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So: if others do provide him with even the possibility of staying on as Prime Minister, he may well seek to exploit that possibility.
But: it is no longer his own absolute choice.
His next cynical opportunities are now elsewhere.
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