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Will Boris Johnson survive his full term?

At the moment, it looks 50/50.

He won a landslide election victory two years ago and emerged from his government's (very bad) early handling of the corona crisis unscathed. However, problems are now mounting up and his personal popularity has collapsed. Despite never convincing, Labour has closed the gaps in the polls and our Prime Minister looks like he is floundering.

I think Johnson can ride out this current crisis if he has a quiet two months but he is probably one more major scandal away from losing his job. Unlike the American system, premiers can be removed by MPs in their own party during a term. The Conservative Party has form in this and Johnson himself only got his job when he led a mid-term rebellion against Theresa May. The Conservatives even got rid of Margaret Thatcher (an iconic figure for them) when they realised that she was set to lose the next election. Johnson has never been liked by the other leaders in his party and owes his success to his appeal with the public, an appeal which is in a state of steady collapse.

I would still predict that the Conservatives are more likely than not to win the next election because Keir Starmer is leading a vacuous opposition. However, it may well be with a different leader than Mr Johnson.

Thoughts?
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RedBaron · M
Won't the election be at the end of his term? If so, there's an easy answer. He will survive unless he resigns or dies in office.
OldBrit · 61-69, M
@RedBaron no the UK is not like that system at all.
We elect our mp in our constituency. We elect the person for that role nothing else. They may associate with a party at election time. The party with most seats gets to form government. (As a side note the mp can switch in and out of party allegiance whenever and how many times they like that doesn't necessitate another election as we elect the person not the party.)
OK once a party has enough seats to form a government (over 325 seats) they normally have their leader go to the queen to ask permission to form a government.
But they are only there as long as the party they represent want them.
We don't elect a pm we only eject our mp remember.
They can (and have regularly in the past) be ousted by their party under whatever system they have for leadership challenges.
Last point to remember in UK is that parliament is sovereign, nor the pm (they have relatively little executive powers) or even the government or cabinet to get anything done they have to get a majority in parliament which then means the queen will sign into legislation.