July 13, 2022
11:00 am
Prime Ministers QuestionsĀ
Catch-up
PMQs Live – Scotland can’t afford cost of living with WestminsterĀ Ā
PMQs Live – Rowdy scenes as non dom rules questioned
PMQs Live – PM to face humiliating grilling from Sir KeirĀ
Sajid Javid delivers brutal resignation speech in CommonsĀ
PMQs Live – 06/07 – PM faces tough questions over Chris Pincher
PMQs live – PM faces grilling after shock resignationsĀ
PMQs Live – Scotland wants independence – Blackford
PMQs Live – PM to face humiliating grilling from Sir Keir
This week will see Boris Johnson face-off with Keir Starmer – the first PMQs since the prime minister quit.
Boris Johnson will leave No 10 in September – a Tory leadership race is currently underway. The list of candidates has been slimmed down to eight: Rishi Sunak, Liz Truss, Tom Tugendhat, Kemi Badenoch, Penny Mordaunt, Jeremy Hunt, Nadhim Zahawi and Suella Braverman.yo
The first round of voting will kick off today between 13:30 – 15:30 pm.Ā
What time is PMQs today?
This weekās PMQs starts at its usual time of midday and will last roughly around 40 minutes.Ā
How can I watch PMQs?Ā
You can watch our live stream here or follow along with blog updates.Ā
What can we expect from this weekās PMQs?Ā
This is the second to last PMQs for Boris Johnson, whoās expected to face a tough PMQs today. Next Wednesday will be the PMās final appearance before Parliament breaks for summer. A new tory leader will be in place by the time they return in September.Ā
Ministers blocked labourās no-confidence vote in the Prime Minister on Tuesday.Ā
Downing Street said it would allow time for a vote of no confidence in the Government, but not the Prime Minister.
Sir Keir said he wanted a vote to prevent Mr Johnson āclinging on for a few monthsā.
āWe have put down a vote of no confidence, and challenged any Tory MP who in the last few days has said, āI canāt serve Boris Johnson because you canāt trust a word the man saysā,ā Sir Keir said.
āCan they really vote to say he should stay in power for another few weeks?ā
Labourās motion read: āThis House has no confidence in Her Majestyās Government while the Rt Hon Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip remains Prime Minister.ā
The Government declined to permit time for the vote, saying Labour āhave chosen to play politics by tabling a vote of no confidence in the Government and the Prime Ministerā.
The statement continued: āAs the Prime Minister has already resigned and a leadership process is under way we do not feel this is a valuable use of parliamentary time.ā
Sajid Javid delivers brutal resignation speech in CommonsĀ
Sajid Javid delivers his resignation speech in the Commons – the speech is bruising and delivers stinging criticism of his boss. The former Health Secretary quit his role late last night, followed just under 10 minutes later by Chancellor Rishi Sunak. Since then, there has been a flurry of resignation and Tories withdrawing their support for the prime minister. Now, more than ever, it appears the PM will face a second confidence vote.Ā
At 3 pm today the prime minister will face a second grilling from MPs as he is set to appear at the Liaison Committee after PMQs.
More resignations rolling in for the PMĀ
PMQs – Sajid Javid delivers resignation speech
Sajid Javid went on to reiterate that “treading the tightrope between loyalty and integrity has become impossible in recent months.”
He said: “I will never risk losing my integrity.”
The former health secretary said he believes a team is “as good as its team captain, and that a captain is as good as his or her team.”
“Loyalty must go both ways,” Mr Javid said. “The events of recent months have made it increasingly difficult to be in that team.
“It’s not fair on ministerial colleagues to go about every morning defending lines that don’t stand up and don’t hold up.
“It’s not fair on my parliamentary colleagues who bare the brunt of constituents’ dismay in their inbox and on their doorsteps in recent elections.
“And it’s not fair on Conservative members and voters who rightly expect better standards from the party they supported.”
āI was told there was no partiesāĀ
Mr Javid said he was assured “at the most senior level” that “there had been no parties in Downing Street and that no rules were broken” at the start of the scandal.
“So I gave the benefit of doubt and I went on those media rounds to say I had those assurances from the most senior level of the prime minister’s team,” he said.
“Then we had more stories, then we had the Sue Gray report. I continued to give the benefit of the doubt.
“This week again we have reason to question the truth and integrity of what we have all been told, and at some point we have to conclude that enough is enough.
“I believe that point is now.”
Read Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid resignation letters in full ā and the PMās responseĀ
āOne of the toughest rolesāĀ
Mr Javid added that he fears the reset button can only work “so many times”, saying: “There’s only so many times you can turn that machine off an on before you realise that something is fundamentally wrong.”
Continuing his statement, Sajid Javid said his time as health secretary has “undoubtedly also been one of the toughest roles that I have had so far”.
He added: “The gravity of home office decisions, the scale of treasury decisions, but nothing matters more than the health of the British people, especially in the wake of a pandemic.”
Mr Javid then took a moment to pay tribute to those working in the NHS.
“There is so much that I planned for the long term,” he said. “For the long term reform of our health and care systems, and it is a wrench to leave important work behind.
“When I last gave a personal statement from this seat I spoke about the importance of institutions and conventions.
“Today, it is about the importance of integrity.
“Don’t worry, there’s not going to be a series of these.”
He said these are both “central pillars” that underpin “our great democracy”.
Mr Javid went on to say he believes all MPs are “motivated by the national interest”, adding: “The public expects all of us to maintain honesty and maintain integrity.”
He said this is not an “abstract matter,” adding: “We must bring the country together as one nation.”