Petition for Boris Johnson to stay as PM close to hitting 10,000 Tory members anger mounts over his ousting

0
136
Alamy Live News. 2JHPN3R London, England, UK. 20th July, 2022. UK Prime Minister BORIS JOHNSON leaves 10 Downing Street ahead of his last Prime Minister's Questions session in House of Commons. (Credit Image: ¿ Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire) Credit: ZUMA Press, Inc./Alamy Live News This is an Alamy Live News image and may not be part of your current Alamy deal . If you are unsure, please contact our sales team to check.

A BRING back Boris petition was close to hitting 10,000 Tory members yesterday as anger mounts over the ousting of the PM.

At least 9,150 true blues want Bojo’s name to be included on their ballots alongside leadership contenders Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss.

A bring back Boris petition was close to hitting 10,000 Tory members

Many want the ousted PM’s name to be alongside Rishi Sunak’s and Liz Truss’s on the ballot

It’s been organised by two ultra-BoJo loyalists – the multimillionaire Tory peer and donor Lord Cruddas and ex-MEP David Campbell-Bannerman.

Lord Cruddas raged: “The ousting of Boris Johnson as prime minister by a minority of MPs is deeply anti-democratic.

“It defies the will of the country and the Conservative Party members who elected him.

“It amounts to a coup. I am ashamed this can happen in Britain, the birthplace of modern democracy.”

This comes as Ms Truss and Mr Sunak prepare for three head-to-head debates in this week.

Over the weekend, the pair clashed on immigration as Mr Sunak attempted to flash his right-wing credentials after hoovering up the support of moderate MPs in the early rounds of the leadership battle.

Both candidates have vowed to go ­further in the controversial Rwanda ­policy, with Ms Truss vowing to hike the size of Border Force.

Mr Sunak promised to do “whatever it takes” for the scheme to succeed.

But last night Team Truss said a plan floated by him to house asylum seekers on empty cruise ships would break international law.

Her supporters also claimed the idea would lead to the creation of prison ships in areas that are in desperate need of tourism and investment.

The candidates also continued their bickering over tax cuts.