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Around a dozen candidates are vying on Friday to replace Boris Johnson as prime minister, who resigned after his Conservative Party turned against him, the latter demanding his immediate departure from Downing Street.
Johnson said on Thursday that he would step down as Conservative leader and British prime minister following the resignation of more than 50 government ministers and many of his own lawmakers.
The scramble to choose his successor — a process that could take weeks or even months — is underway with senior figures and some lesser-known members of parliament. Tom Tugendhat is the latest Conservative MP to show an interest in the leadership, joining Attorney-General Suella Braverman and MP Steve Baker in this ambition.
Meanwhile, Johnson, beset by a series of scandals and a loss of confidence in his integrity, remains in the job, a situation that opponents and many in his own party say is unsustainable.
“I think Tory MPs should get rid of it today,” Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader, told BBC TV. “It’s just ridiculous that he is the acting prime minister. He has never taken care of anything in his life.”
The opposition Labor Party has also called for Johnson to step down immediately, promising to hold a vote of confidence in parliament if he is not sacked immediately.
In his resignation speech, Johnson said that it is the will of his party that he leave, while he did not mention the word resignation.
The media have floated other names as possible successors to Johnson, among them: the foreign secretary, Liz Truss, the former foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, the defense secretary, Ben Wallace, and others.
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