Jeremy Wright thinks the Prime Minister should go (Photo: Rex/Pennsylvania)

The former attorney general demanded the prime minister’s resignation.

Jeremy Wright has become the latest Conservative member to say the “sloppy” Boris Johnson resigned later that day as the aftermath of the Parisgate scandal continued to cover the snow.

In a lengthy statement on his website at up to 2,303 words, Wright wrote:

He continued, admitting that he was not sure if the Prime Minister had misunderstood Congress.[Trust] It matters because the government still needs to require the citizens of this country to abide by rules that are difficult to enforce and to make sacrifices that are difficult to pay to provide or maintain greater benefits.

“The collective impact of citizens refusing to do so can still be severe.”

There was initial confusion about the intervention which temporarily disappeared from its website, but a spokesperson confirmed that it was real and then reappeared.

The statement continued, criticizing both parties for violating the blockade. “Therefore, I regret to conclude that the prime minister must resign for this and future governments.”

Boris Johnson increasingly calls for his resignation (Photo: Reuters)

Wright’s name can now be added to the ever-growing list of Tories who want the PMs gone.

If 54 legislators wrote to the chairman of the 1922 Committee requesting Johnson’s resignation, he would vote to distrust his leadership.

Some 25 lawmakers have publicly said Johnson should go, but he is likely to write to Sir Graham Brady himself.

Wright served as Attorney General from 2014 to 2018 under Theresa May and David Cameron.

However, Congressman Kenilworth and Southern (Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, Minister for Prisons, Sir Commissar) has lost his cabinet post under Johnson.

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Wright continued: “I am not sure why the Prime Minister deliberately misrepresented the House of Commons, but I think there is clear evidence that he made a mistake.

“Furthermore, if you thought he would be frightened and resentful of what happened when the PM was not in Downing Street, I cannot believe that senior officials and advisers allowed, encouraged and encouraged Covid to break the rules.”

This was followed by a report from Sue Gray explaining the magnitude of the gap at Number 10 and Whitehall when Covid restrictions were in place.

This followed an investigation by the Metropolitan Police which found that Mr Johnson, his wife and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak had all been fined – Mr Johnson was the first to discover that he had broken the law. I became the incumbent Prime Minister.

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