LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces his leadership test after conservatives lost the election by Friday in the ultra-safe chair they had for two centuries.
In one of the largest swings in modern times, Liberal Democrats canceled the majority of nearly 23,000 in the North Shropshire ratio and seized the blue-blue fortress with a margin of 5,925 votes.
Johnson said the result was “very disappointing” and he “heard what voters said”, blamed the political earthquake on “constant litany of politicians” in the media rather than the launch of the Jab Booster.
The election officer of the North Shropshire Agriculture Constituency was triggered after Owen Paterson, MP since 1997, resigned in November after the Commissioner of Parliament for the standard concluded he violated rules and recommended his suspension.
Paterson denied the allegations.
A series of stories about Christmas parties at Downing Street and conservative headquarters in violations of locking rules in 2020 occurred while controversy over donations used to fund flat repairs PM who reappeared.
The rebellion by 100 members of the conservative parliament against the vaccine passport on Tuesday showed dissatisfaction in Tory’s backbench on Johnson’s leadership encouraged more people to choose Liberal Democrats, said the central member of the Conservative Shropshire and Mayor of Drayton Roy Aldcroft.
People in North Shropshire were not happy with “what was happening in London,” he said, and not happy with Brexit delivery, he added.
North Shropshire chose “go”.
“There is an Irish problem, the problem of french fishing, and we have HGV which depends on the port because all the documents are needed,” he added.
People in North Shropshire were also angry at how Paterson was treated.
“He was a member of the old energetic parliament who did work well and they felt disadvantaged about the way he was forced into his resignation.
If he stood he would win,” he said.
Conservative candidates, Dr.
Neil Shastri-Hurst, a lawyer and Indian heritage surgeon, plunged umbrella from Birmingham without local knowledge of the area, said Mark Whitton, Deputy Mayor of Drayton.
“More than half of the people in the city cannot say their names.
He is a truly wrong person for Shropshire.” Sir Graham Brady, Chairperson of the Tory 1922 Backbent Committee, has announced that it will receive a letter that demands no trust in Johnson “via email”.
Fifteen percent of Tory Parliamentarians can trigger a voice.
Sir Roger Gale MP said: “One more strike and he came out.”