Boris on the Brink: Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid Quit Government

Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid have both quit the Government this evening, saying we “cannot continue like this”, bringing Boris Johnson’s premiership to the brink of implosion. MailOnline has more.

Boris Johnson is tonight teetering on the edge as Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid both dramatically quit his Cabinet within minutes of each other.

Shortly after the Prime Minister issued a grovelling apology over his appointment of shamed MP Chris Pincher, Mr Johnson was hit by the double blow.

In his resignation letter, Mr. Sunak told the PM that “we cannot continue like this”.

Acknowledging that he might be waving goodbye to his ministerial career for good, the outgoing Chancellor added: “The public rightly expect Government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously. I recognise this may be my last ministerial job, but I believe these standards are worth fighting for and that is why I am resigning.”

Meanwhile, Mr .Javid publicly questioned Mr Johnson’s integrity, competence and ability to act in the national interest.

He told the PM: “It is with enormous regret that I must tell you that I can no longer, in good conscience, continue serving in this Government. I am instinctively a team player but the British people also rightly expect integrity from their Government.”

It appeared Mr. Sunak and Mr. Javid had heeded calls from Tory rebel MPs – who had been demanding action from Cabinet ministers over the latest sleaze scandal battering Mr. Johnson’s Government.

Their double resignation sparked feverish speculation that other members of the Cabinet might soon follow suit in quitting Mr. Johnson’s Government.

But Deputy PM Dominic Raab, Defence Secretary Ben Wallace and Home Secretary Priti Patel were all said to be staying in Cabinet.

Boris has been awful – a man of tissue-thin integrity, lacking focus who far too easily allows the assorted big spenders, Covidians and wokesters around him in the Tory party and the Civil Service to drive the agenda. But if he falls, will we get anything better?

Worth reading in full.

Here are the resignation letters in full.


Sajid Javid

Prime Minister,

It was a privilege to have been asked to come back into Government to serve as Secretary of State for Health & Social Care at such a critical time for our country. I have given every ounce of energy to this task, and am incredibly proud of what we have achieved.

The U.K. has led the world in learning to live with Covid. Thanks to the amazing rollout of our booster programme, investment in treatments, and innovations in the way we deliver healthcare, the British people have enjoyed months more freedom than other comparable countries.

We have also made important strides in the recovery and reform of NHS and adult social care. The longest waiters are down by 70% and, as you know, I have been working hard on wider modernisation of the NHS. I have also developed radical new approaches to dementia, cancer and mental health, and prepared the Health Disparities White Paper which will set out plans to level up health outcomes for communities that have been left behind for too long.

Given the unprecedented scale of the challenges in health and social care, it has been my instinct to continue focusing on this important work. So it is with enormous regret that I must tell you that I can no longer, in good conscience, continue serving in this Government. I am instinctively a team player but the British people also rightly expect integrity from their Government.

The tone you set as a leader, and the values you represent, reflect on your colleagues, your party and ultimately the country. Conservatives at their best are seen as hard-headed decision-makers, guided by strong values. We may not have always been popular, but we have been competent in acting in the national interest. Sadly, in the current circumstances, the public are concluding that we are now neither. The vote of confidence last month showed that a large number of our colleagues agree. It was a moment for humility, grip and new direction. I regret to say, however, that it is clear to me that this situation will not change under your leadership – and you have therefore lost my confidence too.

It is three years since you entered Downing Street. You will forever be credited with seeing off the threat of Corbynism, and breaking the deadlock on Brexit. You have shone a very welcome light on the regional disparities in our country, an agenda that will continue to define our politics. These are commendable legacies in unprecedented times. But the country needs a strong and principled Conservative Party, and the Party is bigger than any one individual. I served you loyally and as a friend, but we all serve the country first. When made to choose between those loyalties there can only be one answer.

Finally, I would like to put on record my thanks to ministerial and departmental colleagues, my admiration for NHS and social care staff, and my love for my family who have been immensely patient in these challenging times.

Yours ever,

S. Javid 


Rishi Sunak 

Dear Prime Minister,

It is with deep sadness that I am writing to you to resign from the Government.

It has been an enormous privilege to serve our country as Chancellor of the Exchequer and I will always be proud of how during the pandemic we protected people’s jobs and businesses through actions such as furlough.

To leave ministerial office is a serious matter at any time. For me to step down as Chancellor while the world is suffering the economic consequences of the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and other serious challenges is a decision that I have not taken lightly.

However, the public rightly expect government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously. I recognise this may be my last ministerial job, but I believe these standards are worth fighting for and that is why I am resigning.

I have been loyal to you. I backed you to become Leader of our Party and encouraged others to do so. I have served as your Chancellor with gratitude that you entrusted me with stewardship of the nation’s economy and finances. Above all, I have respected the powerful mandate given to you by the British people in 2019 and how under your leadership we broke the Brexit deadlock.

That is why I have always tried to compromise in order to deliver the things you want to achieve. On those occasions where I disagreed with you privately, I have supported you publicly. That is the nature of the collective government upon which our system relies and it is particularly important that the Prime Minister and Chancellor remain united in hard times such as those we are experiencing today.

Our country is facing immense challenges. We both want a low-tax, high-growth economy, and world class public services, but this can only be responsibly delivered if we are prepared to work hard, make sacrifices and take difficult decisions.

I firmly believe the public are ready to hear that truth. Our people know that if something is too good to be true then it’s not true. They need to know that whilst there is a path to a better future, it is not an easy one. In preparation for our proposed joint speech on the economy next week, it has become clear to me that our approaches are fundamentally too different.

I am sad to be leaving Government but I have reluctantly come to the conclusion that we cannot continue like this.

Kind regards,

Rishi Sunak

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stewart
3 years ago

It’s over.

Brace position, everyone. Incoming Davos stooge.

Rowan
Rowan
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

While Bozo isn’t a Davos stooge.

David101
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

There’s one man speaking a modicum of sense when it comes to vaccination policy…. Don’t worry, we can make him disappear. Badaboom!

RW
RW
3 years ago

In usual times, this would be good news. But right now, I’m just scared that this will ultimatively bring us a renewed round of COVID measures.

captainbeefheart-2.0
captainbeefheart-2.0
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

That must be ignored as much as possible

thefoostybadger
thefoostybadger
3 years ago

What must be? 😉

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
3 years ago

A renewed round of Covid measures.

Free Lemming
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Indeed. I wholeheartedly disagree with those who sit on their whiter than white moral perch banging on about how it’s morally wrong to have reservations about this idiot leaving office. I cannot abide the bloke, but there is a possibility that he was/is a thorn in the elites side. He definitely went against the flow a number of times and set the trend of relaxation of the rules that other countries followed. Where would we be if that hadn’t happened? Of course we don’t know the answer to that, but my guess is we’d be a hell of a lot closer to where they wanted us to be. We are up against the devil and only one misstep away from entering hell.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  Free Lemming

He relaxed the rules because he was in deep muck, having just lost a by-election, Party gate was simmering and his leadership and continued tenancy of No 10 was in question. He gave in to other Cabinet Members and senior Tories against return to restrictions, to keep their support and save his neck.

The fact that some think he is a hero over this and made a brave stand was of course his intention and what he us good at, self-promotion and fooling people.

But what is most important to consider is his ruinous Net Zero policy, Statist, interventionist economic ideology and entangling this Country in a war with Russia – the consequence of all this is abundantly clear when you look at an electricity bill, buy petrol, and see the fall in purchase power of your money.

We can ignore CoVid rules, but not an economy in ruins.

Rowan
Rowan
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

With or without the Bozo, a new round of Covid measures will arrive on schedule.

Gefion
Gefion
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Me too, RW, me too…

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
3 years ago

The idea that they’ve only just realised his abundance of faults because of the trivial Pincher issue is laughable.

sophie123
3 years ago

Jesus.

I don’t get it. They don’t resign over the cruel and imbecilic threats to caseworkers and healthcare workers, but resign over a bog standard tory sleaze scandal that is kind of par for the course?

I don’t buy it:
1) Sunak can see the writing on the wall and the economic chaos that is barely being held back and wants to duck and run
2) Javid knows the health minister will be swinging from a lamppost within 12mo and wants to flee the country. It doesn’t matter. He will be hunted down like a Nazi war criminal.

stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  sophie123

It’s been a relentless attack on Johnson over the last 6 to 8 months. He’s the only Anglosphere leader who isn’t in lockstep with the covid tyranny. He’s tried to play along without fully giving in, the UK has shown them up with the more lax approach in the last 9 months and he’s paying for it.

It’s been one thing after another unti finally they’ve got what they wanted.

Now we’ll get Hunt or some dreadful clone in to follow orders dutifully.

sophie123
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Not that f****r. Jesus. They are all bloody awful. And according to Marc Steyn Keir Starmer has been fined, but is appealing and has a super injunction to stop it being reported, so that’ll be him gone too if Durham police hold their nerve (no tears from me, useless sack of s**t that he is).

thefoostybadger
thefoostybadger
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Labour MP on GB News right now giving it “General Election…..General Election”.

As predictable as the rain, endless plotting to force Johnson out, and if/when he does the next “outrage” will be that his successor has no mandate.

Endless elections, all of which offer no choice to people who want just to get on with life unhindered.

JohnK
3 years ago

I saw that last night (it’s 7:14 6/7 now). What occurred to me is that we are pretty close to the Summer holidays – Parliament shuts down on the 21st, then it’s usually into the party conferences and so on. Not an ideal time of year for a GE, for any of them.

Perhaps what we need to be wary of now is the prospect of bureaucracy gaining power to our detriment, while the disruption is going on.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  stewart

The CoVid tyranny is collapsing everywhere. You credit BoZo with too much. What’s important is the global governance tyranny pushing us back into the early 18th Century.

JayBee
3 years ago
Reply to  sophie123

Reg 2) The Austrian health minister already tried to save his skin by throwing the doctors under the bus.
I think this might support your analysis.

Freddy Boy
3 years ago
Reply to  sophie123

My thoughts exactly , mind you Wancock is still lamppost free 🤯

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  sophie123

Super rats abandoning the sinking super tanker.

Uncle Monty
3 years ago

look no further than here for a list of the runners and riders to become the next British PM:
https://www.younggloballeaders.org/

oblong
3 years ago
Reply to  Uncle Monty

Puke

JohnK
3 years ago

Well, who’s not sceptical now? One of the presenters on GBN in the last hour suggested that if we do end up with a snap general election, there could be an ultra low turnout. No surprise if that happens, with a national government looking as bad as many Councils, with low confidence from the general public.

JXB
JXB
3 years ago
Reply to  JohnK

Why would there be a General Election? The Tories still hold a comfortable majority and can still form a Government under a new leader.

JohnK
3 years ago
Reply to  JXB

There was some speculation about the possibility last night on GBN, but it does look unlikely, at least until after the conference season this year. This is the latest story: https://www.gbnews.uk/news/boris-johnson-urged-against-calling-general-election-by-gb-news-viewers-despite-leadership-crisis-poll/332587

captainbeefheart-2.0
captainbeefheart-2.0
3 years ago

I wonder if resigning makes you any less complicit in crimes against humanity?

JUDGE (if there was one that wasn’t corrupt): So you were on the cabinet for a government that used psychological warfare against it’s own people to brainwash them, into thinking the flu was the deadliest thing ever and to take a poisonous untested vaccine every 15 seconds, how do you plead?

THAT BUNCH OF ARSEHOLES: I resigned

JUDGE: Well, that’s OK then, carry on…

BurlingtonBertie
3 years ago

All still as complicit. They put their names against the diktats & Hansard is a verbatim record of what was said. Nowhere to hide. Following orders isn’t an excuse either.
Under a new PM who is more aligned to the global evil cabal, this pair are likely to be back in office as they’re both heavy duty WEF. They have followed orders dutifully so will be rewarded.

alanm
3 years ago

“WEF Launches Attempted Coup Against UK PM Who Resists Further Lockdowns, Vaccine Passports, Masks”.

johnboy12
3 years ago
Reply to  alanm

As Maajid Nawaz puts it, ‘beware domestic palace coups to serve global palace coups’

Johnson was already fully in the pocket of the WEF, the people are the issue. They may feel perhaps a new face will encourage more compliance and acceptance. I suspect they are widely wrong there. Those who have resisted thus far, and the many others joining their ranks, will not cave to a new puppet

TJN
TJN
3 years ago

Johnson signed his own political death warrant back on 23 March 2020. Three days later, in what struck me at the time as a remarkably prescient piece, Sherelle Jacobs in The Telegraph appeared to realise this: Here’s the last two paragraphs: Most chilling of all perhaps, as this pandemic demonstrates, when managerial elites fail, they fall back on soft totalitarianism and the surveillance state to crawl their countries out of the messes they themselves have, through their sheer incompetence, created. In the long term, total systems change in Britain now looks more inevitable than ever; we may look back on coronavirus as even more of a catalyst than Brexit in time. But for now, Mr Johnson’s short-term choice in coming weeks is clear: back herd immunity or be prepared to fall with the infirm herd of global elites, who will not survive this disgraceful fiasco. I posted this on this site back at the time and again a little later, with the comment:That was two months ago. We now know which of these choices Mr Johnson backed.  We now need to wait on Ms Jacobs’ last statement coming to fruition. With the unfolding realisation that the ‘vaccines’ have been a… Read more »

alanm
3 years ago

Barclay is the new Health Secretary. Could have been worse.

Marcus Aurelius knew
3 years ago

PRAY we don’t get Jeremy Hunt when Boris resigns…

huxleypiggles
3 years ago

A move to oust Bozo by two very prominent Davos Deviants. Their intention will be to precipitate a leadership battle and once that is resolved a general election. The timescale might mean an election in 2023 which would take the ‘winning’ party through to 2028, two years prior to the 2030 deadline, sufficient time for any tidying up procedures. I am not so sure the Tories will win but this is largely immaterial given we are effectively in a one party state and assuming the vote is honest, which would be stretching matters.

Interesting that the lead actors sharing the Brutus role are of non English heritage.

The nastiness is going to escalate for sure.

ellie-em
3 years ago

Tricky Sunak says the public expect “government to be conducted properly, competently and seriously”. Seeing that all 3 of those qualities have been lacking since the Tories have been in power, why is he only now resigning? 

Savage Jabber regrets that he can no longer continue in good conscience. His conscience hasn’t bothered him for the last 18 months or so!! 

Rats!

Lockdown Sceptic
3 years ago

IS HE MENTALLY ILL? You Decide! (Boris Johnson)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPt-M1ry-Vk
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Telegram http://t.me/astandintheparkbracknell

Gefion
Gefion
3 years ago

When I heard that Javid had gone, I had a brief moment of elation that it might have been that he couldn’t bring himself to allow babies and little children to be vaccinated and damaged. Silly me.

I hope Boris goes but saw that Jeremy Hunt was a favourite and am concerned about the possibility of mandatory vaccines for all and Covid passports too.

Freddy Boy
3 years ago

Zahawi continues up the greasy pole ! Some were touting him for PM ! It’s all TOO Much !!…

marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

SOS the ship is sinking.

The old bat
3 years ago

Two more resignations this morning – Robin Walker, minister for schools and Will Quince (who he, ed?) minister for children and families.
How long can the pm survive? Not very much longer I would say. If I was a betting person I would say within 24 hours. Watch out for some ’emergency’ to divert attention.

YouDontSay
3 years ago

Can the ministers who are “resigning from the Government” please stay permanently resigned?