Workingman wrote:The rules of the game are that the leader of the largest party in government becomes the PM, so something like 200,000 monocle wearers and blue rinse Little Englanders are effectively electing our PM, the rest of us in the UK have no say.
The rules of the game say that the Electorate elect a party and the leader of that party becomes the PM. Should the leader change then the PM changes. To reiterate, the electorate did not and never does, elect a PM. They elect a party. They may like the leader and want to vote for the party because they like the leader. But they do not elect a PM. Just a party. No presidents here. The party could, if it so wanted, change the rules and change the PM the day after the election. Not a thing the Electorate could do about it until the next GE.
The press have had endless, "effort free", so called news attacking Johnson, now culminating with his resignation. Now they have endless "effort free" so called news on the election of a new leader where they can rile people up and make statements which are basically unsound and untrue but can be said so long as they put in "should have" somewhere.
I like Meds change. Make a GE mandatory on change of PM. This shower of backstabbers would have zipped it pronto and stonewalled the press if they thought they were going to have to face an election by bringing Johnson down. Showing them up for exactly who they are.
Truss will not be so foolish as May and go for a GE. What could she possibly gain? Apart from losing a bunch of MP's she could well do without on both front and back benches. She would, however, lose the election. A zero sum game if ever there was one. As for Sunak, should he win? I have no idea what he is thinking on that, but I suspect that he would not dare to go for an election immediately.