Some of the UK’s Conservative backbenchers have been talking about ousting Prime Minister Boris Johnson, a senior Tory said on Friday.
Asked if the Tories are talking about deposing Johnson, Barwell told BBC Radio 4’s “Today” programme, “There are definitely those conversations happening.”
“MPs have talked to me about it,” he said.
“That doesn’t mean it is going to happen. But Boris, more than anyone, his position depends on being seen as an electoral asset. If over time that goes, he really is in trouble.”
Speaking to the same programme, Nus Ghani, vice-chair of the 1922 committee, said: “The mood in Parliament is not good.”
The new measures include mandatory COVID Passes for entering nightclubs and large venues and an expansion of settings that legally require mask-wearing.
“Many more this time round do not think a good case has been made,” Redwood wrote.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid faced a barrage of Tory criticism when he announced the latest measures in Parliament at the same time as Johnson addressed the nation on Wednesday.
Conservative MPs anger had been fuelled by suspicions the new measures were introduced as an attempt to distract from Johnson’s troubles over an alleged staff party in Downing Street during last December’s lockdown.
“Why should people at home, listening to the prime minister and the secretary of state, do things that people working in No.10 Downing Street are not prepared to do?” Marker Harper, former party whip and chair of the COVID Recovery Group, questioned Javid after his statement.
Conservative MPs also argued that the government has jumped the gun before data became available.
At least two dozen Conservative MP’s took to Twitter, saying they cannot and will not vote for vaccine passports.
“I have long opposed vaccine passports, and so will vote against their introduction next week,” Dehenna Davison, MP for Bishop Auckland wrote.
“To me, the evidence we have been presented with does not justify further restrictions on liberties. ‘Just in case’ simply doesn’t cut it,” she added.
However, the vote on Tuesday is expected to pass as the proposal has the support of the Labour Party, which throughout the pandemic consistently voted for CCP virus restrictions and criticised the government for not reacting soon enough or far enough to rising case numbers.
The Epoch Times reached out to No 10 Downing Street for comment.