Boris Johnson is to fight on to save his political career despite a succession of cabinet ministers personally telling him it was time to go.
The prime minister rejected direct pleas from the likes of Grant Shapps, Simon Hart, Priti Patel and Brandon Lewis to quit.
Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of Conservative backbenchers, also met with the PM in Downing Street to tell him he now longer had the support of the parliamentary party.
Meanwhile, dozens of government frontbenchers quit their posts throughout the day in a bid to force Johnson to resign.
A succession of backbenchers, including many who had supported him in last month’s vote of confidence, also made it clear that they now wanted him out.
But the defiant prime minister insisted he had a mandate from the people to carry on in the job, insisting that he would continue to focus on the “hugely important issues facing the country”.
One MP told HuffPost UK: “He’ll try to ride it out. He’s unbelievably selfish but no one can be surprised by that now.”
Patel – a long-time loyalist – is said to have spoken to the prime minister to convey the “overwhelming view” of the parliamentary party.
Shapps is thought to have told Johnson that he stood little chance of winning another confidence vote and should instead set out a timetable for a departure on his own terms.
But a source close to the PM said he told his colleagues there would be “chaos” if he quit and the party would almost certainly lose the next election.
The source said Johnson was “continuing to focus on delivering for the public” and addressing the “hugely important issues facing the country”.
If Johnson digs in, even in the face of further resignations, the next flashpoint is set to be on Monday, when the 1922 committee has scheduled elections for its executive committee.
The new executive could decide to alter the rules, allowing another confidence vote within 12 months, with Johnson then facing a fresh battle to remain in office.
Wednesday’s drama followed the shock resignations of Rishi Sunak and Sajid Javid a day earlier.
The PM managed to see off the immediate threat to his premiership by carrying out a hasty reshuffle.
But the resignation of several junior ministers, as well as a number of ministerial aides, piled further pressure on Johnson to fall on his sword.
During a disastrous appearance in front of the Commons liaison committee, cabinet ministers began arriving in No. 10 so they could tell Johnson his time was up when he came back.
Astonishingly, a rival group of Johnson-supporting ministers, including Nadine Dorries, also arrived in Downing Street to give him their backing.
The PM struck a defiant tone during his committee appearance, repeatedly insisting that he had no intention of quitting.
Johnson said: “I look at the biggest war in Europe for 80 years and I can’t for the life of me see how it is responsible just to walk away from that. Particularly not when you have a mandate of the kind that we won two, three years ago.”
He added: “We’re going to get on with running the country.”
This is a breaking news story and will be updated. Follow HuffPost UK on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
Source: Huff Post