Tag Archives: noconfidence

Macron to address government plan, protests after surviving no-confidence vote on pension reform – Fox Business

  1. Macron to address government plan, protests after surviving no-confidence vote on pension reform Fox Business
  2. French President Macron survives first vote of no confidence NBC News
  3. What We’re Watching: Slim win for Macron, protests in South Africa, Trump’s legal woes, Colombia peace collapsing? GZERO Media
  4. What can we expect from Macron’s live interview on the controversial pension reforms? The Local France
  5. REPLAY: French PM defends contested pension reform as ‘compromise’ • FRANCE 24 English FRANCE 24 English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

British Prime Minister Johnson survives no-confidence vote

LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson survived a no-confidence vote on Monday, securing enough support from his Conservative Party to remain in office despite a rebellion that leaves him a weakened leader with an uncertain future.

Known for his ability to shrug off scandals, the charismatic leader has struggled to turn the page on revelations that he and his staff repeatedly held boozy parties that flouted the COVID-19 restrictions they imposed on others. Support among his fellow Conservative lawmakers has weakened as some see the leader, renowned for his ability to connect with voters, increasingly as a liability rather than an asset in elections.

Johnson won the backing of 211 out of 359 Conservative lawmakers, more than the simple majority needed to remain in power, but still a significant rebellion of 148 MPs. With no clear front-runner to succeed him, most political observers had predicted he would defeat the challenge.

But the rebellion represents a watershed moment for him — and is a sign of deep Conservative divisions, less than three years after Johnson led the party to its biggest election victory in decades.

Johnson’s winning margin is less than that secured by his predecessor Theresa May in a similar vote in December 2018. She was forced to resign six months later.

Johnson, a charismatic leader renowned for his ability to connect with voters, has struggled to turn the page on revelations that he and his staff repeatedly held boozy parties that flouted the COVID-19 restrictions they imposed on others.

Since taking the helm in 2019, Johnson has led Britain out of the European Union and through a pandemic, both of which have shaken the U.K. socially and economically. The vote comes as Johnson’s government is under intense pressure to ease the pain of skyrocketing energy and food bills

Conservative Party official Graham Brady announced Monday that he had received letters calling for a no-confidence vote from at least 54 Tory legislators, enough to trigger the measure under party rules. Hours later, party lawmakers lined up by the dozen in a corridor at Parliament to cast their ballots in a wood-paneled room, handing over their phones as they entered to ensure secrecy.

Johnson’s Downing Street office said the prime minister welcomed the vote as “a chance to end months of speculation and allow the government to draw a line and move on.”

Johnson addressed dozens of Conservative lawmakers in a House of Commons room before the vote as he tried to shore up support, vowing: “I will lead you to victory again.”

“Tonight we have a chance to end the media-driven focus on the leadership of the Conservative Party … We have the chance to stop talking about ourselves and start talking exclusively,” he said.

Discontent that has been building for months erupted after a 10-day parliamentary break that included a long weekend of celebrations of Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee. For many, the four-day holiday was a chance to relax — but there was no respite for Johnson, who was booed by some onlookers as he arrived for a service in the queen’s honor at St. Paul’s Cathedral on Friday.

Brady said some lawmakers who submitted no-confidence letters had asked for them to be held back until after the jubilee weekend — but even so, the threshold was still reached on Sunday.

Johnson’s allies insisted he would stay in office if he wins by even a single vote. But previous prime ministers who survived no-confidence votes emerged severely weakened.

Johnson became prime minister in July 2019m capping a rollercoaster journey to the top. He had held major offices, including London mayor and U.K. foreign secretary, but also spent periods on the political sidelines after self-inflicted gaffes. He kept bouncing back, showing an uncommon ability to shrug off scandal and connect with voters that, for many Conservatives, overshadowed doubts about his ethics or judgment.

But concerns came to a head after an investigator’s report late last month that slammed a culture of rule-breaking inside the prime minister’s office in a scandal known as “partygate.”

Civil service investigator Sue Gray described alcohol-fueled bashes held by Downing Street staff members in 2020 and 2021, when pandemic restrictions prevented U.K. residents from socializing or even visiting dying relatives.

Gray said the “senior leadership team” must bear responsibility for “failures of leadership and judgment.”

Johnson also was fined 50 pounds ($63) by police for attending one party, making him the first prime minister sanctioned for breaking the law while in office.

The prime minister said he was “humbled” and took “full responsibility” — but insisted he would not resign. He urged Britons to “move on” and focus on righting the battered economy and helping Ukraine defend itself against a Russian invasion.

But a growing number of Conservatives feel that Johnson is now a liability who will doom them to defeat at the next election, which must be held by 2024.

“Today’s decision is change or lose,” said Jeremy Hunt, who ran against Johnson for the Conservative leadership in 2019 but has largely refrained from criticizing him since. “I will be voting for change.”

Lawmaker Jesse Norman, a longtime Johnson supporter, said the prime minister had “presided over a culture of casual law-breaking” and had left the government “adrift and distracted.”

Another Tory legislator, John Penrose, quit Monday as the prime minister’s “anticorruption champion,” saying Johnson had breached the government code of conduct with the behavior revealed by partygate.

But senior ministers offered messages of support for Johnson — including some who would be likely to run in the Conservative leadership contest that would be triggered if he is ousted.

“The Prime Minister has my 100% backing in today’s vote and I strongly encourage colleagues to support him,” Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, one of the favorites to succeed Johnson, wrote in a tweet.

Despite his victory, Johnson is likely to face more pressure. The war in Ukraine, a simmering post-Brexit feud with the EU and soaring inflation are all weighing on the government.

Polls give the left-of-center opposition Labour Party a lead nationally, and the Conservatives could lose special elections later this month for two parliamentary districts, called when incumbent Tory lawmakers were forced out by sex scandals.

Johnson tried to focus on broader issues, promising colleagues he would cut taxes — a policy popular with Tories — and noting that he spoke Monday to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. He has been a vocal supporter of Ukraine’s cause, a stance shared by his possible successors.

Cabinet minister Steve Barclay, a Johnson ally, said toppling the leader now would be “indefensible.”

“The problems we face aren’t easy to solve” but Conservatives have the right plan to tackle them, he wrote on the Conservative Home website.

“To disrupt that progress now would be inexcusable to many who lent their vote to us for the first time at the last general election, and who want to see our prime minister deliver the changes promised for their communities.”

Steve Baker, a strong Brexit supporter whose opposition to May helped Johnson take power, said he was voting for Johnson to go because the prime minister had broken the law.

He predicted before the vote that Johnson would likely “formally win” but said that would not settle the matter.

“What that means over the months ahead, I don’t know,” Baker said.

Read original article here

Boris Johnson No-Confidence Vote: Live News Updates

Monday night’s no-confidence vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson returns Britain to bare-knuckled political infighting after a decidedly apolitical weekend, when Britons celebrated Queen Elizabeth’s Platinum Jubilee, and her unifying role as the popular and symbolic head of state.

But during the four-day celebration of the queen’s 70 years on the throne, Mr. Johnson’s troubles were on full display, highlighting national discontent with the prime minister, and putting his public persona in stark relief with that of the queen.

Throughout the weekend, as Mr. Johnson took part in the jubilee celebrations, members of the public — and even participants — made their contempt known.

Mr. Johnson and his wife, Carrie Johnson, were booed as they walked up the steps of St. Paul’s Cathedral on Friday ahead of a service of thanksgiving. Videos circulated showing a similar response as they attended a Saturday night concert outside Buckingham Palace. And during the concert two actors, Lee Mack and Stephen Fry, made digs at Mr. Johnson on the national stage.

But it was the revelers who crowded London streets during the long weekend who remarked — unprompted and often — about their distrust of the government, even as they reflected on their admiration for the queen, providing an insight into how the public at large viewed their leader.

Marian Argent, 77, who had gathered with three generations of her family on the Mall outside Buckingham Palace for the Trooping the Color parade on Thursday, remarked that the Queen was a unifying force, “unlike politicians.”

She rolled her eyes as she remarked “Boris,” with a sigh, before quickly shifting her focus back to the festivities.

In Hyde Park on Friday, Marina Burns, 60, said of the celebrations for the Queen: “It’s all apolitical, that’s why it’s so unifying.”

“Meanwhile, politics is a mess,” Ms. Burns added. “It is absolutely dreadful at the minute with Boris and Partygate.”

She said she considered the jubilee celebrations as one of the first post-Covid moments that the nation could actually find joy in, amid the “doom and gloom” of failing leaders, economic hardship and pandemic losses.

A few park benches away, Erwin Kunnen, 60, who was visiting from the Netherlands and waiting to depart for his flight home, also pointed to the “mess with the prime minister” as one of the many difficulties Britain was currently facing, and why so many people were excited for the positivity of the jubilee.

Catherine Cooke, 48, who works for the National Health Service, also tucked an exasperated comment about the failings of the government into an otherwise glowing account of the festivities.

Ms. Cooke, when reflecting on the “great respect” for the Queen because of her sense of duty to the country, adding, “Our politicians, like Boris, not so much.”

The comments on the streets of London may be indicative of a greater national sentiment, with Mr. Johnson’s approval rating in a YouGov poll dropping to just 26 percent by the start of May. On the heels of the Sue Gray report late last month that highlighted the government’s failure of leadership during coronavirus lockdowns, some 60 percent of people surveyed by YouGov said that Mr. Johnson should no longer be the leader of the Conservative Party.

A snap poll from Opinium on Monday morning, hours after the vote was announced, found that 28 percent of voters think that Conservative lawmakers should vote to keep Mr. Johnson, while 59 percent believed they should vote to remove him.



Read original article here

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan ousted in no-confidence vote

ISLAMABAD, April 10 (Reuters) – Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan was ousted on Sunday when he lost a vote of confidence in parliament, after being deserted by coalition partners who blame him for a crumbling economy and failure to deliver on his campaign promises.

The result of the vote, the culmination of a 13-hour session that included repeated delays, was announced just before 0100 (2000 GMT on Saturday) by the presiding speaker of parliament’s lower house, Ayaz Sadiq.

Khan, 69 was ousted after 3-1/2 years as the leader of the nuclear-armed country of 220 million where the military has ruled for nearly half its nearly 75-year history.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

The late-night vote followed multiple adjournments in the chamber, called due to lengthy speeches by member’s of Khan’s party, who said there was a U.S. conspiracy to oust the cricket star-turned-politician.

Opposition parties were able to secure 174 votes in the 342-member house in support of the no-confidence motion, Sadiq said, making it a majority vote.

“Consequently the motion against Prime Minister Imran Khan has been passed,” he said to the thumping of desks.

There were just a few legislators of Khan’s ruling party present for the vote.

The house voted after the country’s powerful army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa met Khan, said two sources who spoke on condition of anonymity, as criticism mounted over the delay in the parliamentary process.

Parliament will meet on Monday to elect a new prime minister.

Opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif, the front-runner to lead Pakistan, said Khan’s ouster was the chance for a new beginning.

“A new dawn has started… This alliance will rebuild Pakistan,” Sharif, 70, said in parliament.

Sharif, the younger brother of three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif, has a reputation as an effective administrator. read more

Elections are not due until August 2023. However, the opposition has said it wants early elections, but only after it delivered a political defeat to Khan and passes legislation it says is required to ensure the next polls are free and fair.

Khan surged to power in 2018 with the military’s support, but recently lost his parliamentary majority when allies quit his coalition government. There were also signs he had lost the military’s support, analysts said.

Opposition parties say he has failed to revive an economy battered by COVID-19 or fulfil promises to make Pakistan a corruption-free, prosperous nation respected on the world stage.

His ouster extends Pakistan’s unenviable record for political instability: has completed their full term since independence from Britain in 1947, although Khan is the first to be removed through a no-confidence vote. (GRAPHIC: https://tmsnrt.rs/3JsJaU2)

Khan’s allies blocked the no-confidence motion last week and dissolved parliament’s lower house, prompting the country’s Supreme Court to intervene and allow the vote to go through.

Khan earlier accused the United States of backing moves to oust him because he had visited Moscow for talks with President Vladimir Putin just after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24. Washington rejected the charge.

Muhammad Ali Khan, a legislator from Khan’s party, said the prime minister had fought till the end and would return to lead parliament in the future.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Register

Reporting by Asif Shahzad, Syed Raza Hassan and Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam in Islamabad; Writing by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by William Mallard, Jan Harvey and Jonathan Oatis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Thailand’s Prime Minister has survived another no-confidence vote

Prayut received 264 votes in favor and 208 against. Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and four other cabinet ministers also survived the censure motion in similar fashion.

The opposition needed 242 of the 482 parliamentary votes to oust the Prime Minister.

Lawmakers over four days accused his government of mishandling the pandemic and criticized him for the severe economic impact, taking aim at the government’s slow vaccine rollout as a result of not making advance vaccine orders and deciding not to join the international Covax vaccine-supply scheme.

Prayut has stood by those decisions.

This is the third censure motion the government has survived and comes as pro-democracy protesters plan more demonstrations on Saturday.

Recent rallies have turned violent, with security forces using tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets against protesters who threw stones and firecrackers.

Thailand has reported 1.2 million infections and more than 12,000 coronavirus-related deaths, most of them since April due to the Delta variant.

Authorities reported the largest single-day increase in cases in mid-August with more than 23,000 cases.

The vaccine rollout began in June amid the country’s most severe outbreak, with people unable to find medical treatment and some dying at home. About 13% of Thailand’s more than 66 million have been fully vaccinated.

The government cut its 2021 economic growth forecast for a third time, to 0.7-1.2% from 1.5-2.5%. The economy shrank 6.1% last year.

Read original article here