A matter of when, not if?published at 13:13 Greenwich Mean Time 4 February 2022
Iain Watson
Political correspondent
There is no guarantee that Boris Johnson's Conservative critics will oust him.
It would take half the parliamentary party - 180 MPs - to vote for a motion of no confidence in him.
But it takes far fewer - 54 - to trigger that vote and there is a feeling at Westminster that it's a matter of when, not if, that happens.
The assumption by his internal opponents is that it would be easier to win that vote if further evidence for the prosecution emerges - the predicted "carnage" - in the words of one minister - at the May local elections, or the potentially more shocking revelations to come from Sue Gray's full report once the Met police probe has finished.
So some people are withholding their 'no confidence' letters until then.
But the situation is volatile - with unexpected as well as anticipated resignations from No 10 and a chancellor who has distanced himself from some of the PM's more controversial remarks and even included a Partygate barb in an article for the Sun., external
What should concern Downing Street is that the small number of publicly declared rebels come from different wings and different generations of the party.
And some of the 'give him enough rope' collection of ministers and ex ministers know that more co-ordination is needed if the party isn't simply to sleepwalk in to a confidence vote.
But it's not impossible more people follow an MP who tells me he will not publicly declare that he has submitted a no confidence letter.
While he has no particular animus to the PM, he has simply run out of patience and fears delay will just make matters worse.
And a former No 10 insider felt that MPs, if faced with a choice of voting "no confidence" quicker than they had anticipated or keeping Johnson in No 10 for another year, (as the rules state if he wins that vote) then putsch might come to shove.