NewsPoliticsUKWorld Former minister joins calls for Boris Johnson to resign by Barbados Today 05/02/2022 written by Barbados Today Updated by Desmond Brown 05/02/2022 5 min read A+A- Reset FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 279 SOURCE: BBC โ Another Conservative MP has called for Boris Johnson to resign as the turmoil at 10 Downing Street continues. Former minister Nick Gibb is the latest Tory to submit a letter of no confidence in the row over events held at No 10 during lockdown. And Tory MP Stephen Hammond said he is โconsidering very carefullyโ whether he still has confidence in the PM. But Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries insisted the โvast majorityโ of Conservative MPs supported Mr Johnson. Meanwhile, the Daily Mirror reports a photograph of Mr Johnson holding a beer at a birthday gathering has been handed to police investigating Covid breaches. The paper said the picture was one of 300 submitted to the Metropolitan Police investigation into 12 alleged gatherings and was thought to have been taken by the PMโs official photographer, who is funded by the taxpayer. You Might Be Interested In Crystal Beckles-Holder, 2nd runner up in regional competition Bangladesh opposition demand new vote Business owners disappointed It said it showed the prime minister holding a can of beer at an event in No 10โs Cabinet Room in June 2020, alongside Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who was holding a soft drink. At the time, gatherings of more than two people inside were banned by law. It comes at the end of a difficult week for the PM, which has seen five No 10 aides resign and the publication of the initial findings of the Sue Gray report into events at Downing Street while Covid restrictions were in place. Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Gibb, who has served under three prime ministers and who lost his position as schools minister in Boris Johnsonโs reshuffle last September, said his constituents were โfurious about the double standardsโ and that โto restore trust, we need to change the prime ministerโ. He said Covid restrictions imposed by Johnson were โflagrantly disregardedโ in Downing Street, and the PM was inaccurate when, in December, he told the House of Commons there was no party. โSome argue that eating a few canapes with a glass of prosecco is hardly a reason to resign. But telling the truth matters, and nowhere more so than in the House of Commons where, like a court of law, truth must be told regardless of the personal consequences,โ he wrote. Stephen Hammond, Conservative MP for Wimbledon, told the BBC Radio 4โs Week in Westminster programme: โI think all Conservative colleagues, all of whom I know, are in it for trying to do the best for their constituents, and the country will be wrestling with their consciences this weekend.โ Hammond said he had not yet submitted a letter of no confidence in the prime minister but would be considering his next steps โvery carefully over the weekendโ. He added it โcertainly looks likeโ the beginning of the end for Tory confidence in the prime minister. Gibb said fellow backbench Tory Aaron Bell had โstruck a chordโ when he criticised Johnson over lockdown parties earlier this week. Bell had asked the prime minister if he took him for a fool for following the rules himself โ including not hugging his family at his grandmotherโs funeral, or going for a cup of tea after the service. On Friday, Bell said the โbreach of trustโ over the rule breaking and how it had been handled made the PMโs position untenable, as he confirmed he had also submitted a letter of no confidence to Sir Graham Brady โ the chair of the 1922 Committee of backbench MPs. At least 54 MPs need to write to Sir Graham to trigger a vote on the PMโs leadership of the party. Other Conservative MPs are expected to consider whether to put in their letters over the weekend. Johnson has written to all Tory MPs to say he is committed to improving the way 10 Downing Street works. Dorries told the BBC most MPs were โright behind the prime minister because he has deliveredโฆ and will continue to do soโ and said Mr Johnson had been โvery positiveโ when she communicated with him within the past 24 hours. She said a huge amount of change was now under way within No 10, but she was โcautiousโ of asking him to change too much, because of achievements such as having the biggest majority since Margaret Thatcher. Dorries said those speaking out against Mr Johnson were โthe same namesโ that โkeep cropping upโ and โno prime minister would please any of thoseโ. She said there were โa few voices being amplifiedโ by the media, describing the comments made by Gibb and Mr Bell as โdisappointingโ. Speaking on Newsnight, Conservative MP Andrew Bridgen suggested it was now the job of the cabinet to โshow leadershipโ and โconfrontโ the issue of the prime ministerโs leadership. But his fellow Tory MP Richard Bacon suggested it was not for politicians to change governments โ that was for the electorate to take care of. And Liam Fox, former trade secretary, said there was a danger the party was becoming distracted from big issues such as inflation, the energy crisis and the situation in Ukraine. He told BBC Radio 4โs Today programme: โThere will need to be closure on this issue, in the Conservative Party and in the country, and I think when thereโs more to say, we should say it, and there are questions that will need to be answered.โ Some of Johnsonโs supporters, including one former cabinet minister, have criticised the Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who this week distanced himself from the prime ministerโs controversial comments about Sir Keir Starmer, for being disloyal at a difficult time. No 10 policy chief Munira Mirza quit on Thursday, describing Mr Johnsonโs comments on Sir Keir as โscurrilousโ. The prime minister falsely claimed the Labour leader had failed to prosecute paedophile Jimmy Savile during his time as director of public prosecutions. Sunak said he โwouldnโt have said itโ, while on Friday Health Secretary Sajid Javid said Sir Keir โdid a good job and should be respected for itโ. Barbados Today Stay informed and engaged with our digital news platform. The leading online multimedia news resource in Barbados for news you can trust. You may also like Mottley pushes for long-term financing as global crises squeeze small states 15/04/2026 CAAP urges Barbados to cut ties with Israel over โgenocideโ claims 15/04/2026 Crime crisis demands urgent action, Dems warn 14/04/2026