Boris Johnson lays a wreath at the Falklands war memorial in Buenos Aires
There are 24 replies in this Thread which has previously been viewed 9,187 times. The latest Post () was by Rice.
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Well, not my summation exactly, but the point is that with Davis gone, Boris was worried that he would lose his anti-may street cred, so he had to go too in order to position himself for any possible leadership challenge.
Besides, the so called Chequers Brexit deal was untenable and a fudge, leaving much of the decision making still in the hands of Brussels.
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Well, not my summation exactly, but the point is that with Davis gone, Boris was worried that he would lose his anti-may street cred, so he had to go too in order to position himself for any possible leadership challenge.
Besides, the so called Chequers Brexit deal was untenable and a fudge, leaving much of the decision making still in the hands of Brussels.
Do you think that the timing means that Boris believes May will fall soon?
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Turns out Mr. Johnson did not go quietly (surprising, that, no?). He wrote a public letter that would allow any astute reader to imagine how much better he would have handled it than Ms. May.
But written in all modesty, eh?
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