Boris Johnson has only been prime minister for six weeks. He might not last another six.
In the latest dramatic climax in the U.K.'s three-year Brexit saga, Johnson humiliatingly lost his very first vote in parliament, leaving his party in tatters and his strategy in chaos.
More than 20 of Johnson's Conservatives defied his orders last night and backed a plan to stop him forcing the U.K. out of the European Union without a deal on Oct. 31. Johnson retaliated in spectacular style. First he warned that unless the rebels back down in another crucial vote today, he will push forward with his own attempt to trigger a general election. Then he fired them all.
Among the casualties of Johnson's purge were some of the biggest names in British politics. Former chancellor of the exchequer Philip Hammond was ejected from the Tory party. So too was 79-year-old former chancellor Kenneth Clarke, who first served in the cabinet under Margaret Thatcher.
With an early election apparently inevitable, the risk for Johnson is that radically ripping up the Tory party and pushing for a hard Brexit could backfire. With the economy on course for its first recession since the financial crisis, voters may start to see Labour's Jeremy Corbyn as the safer choice.
- Tim Ross
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