Allies rally round Johnson as Tories call for him to go over No 10 drinks party
Cabinet ministers pleaded with MPs to wait for the outcome of an inquiry.

Boris Johnsonās future is hanging in the balance as Cabinet ministers pleaded with Tory MPs to wait for the findings of an official investigation into Downing Street parties before calling for him to quit.
The Prime Minister apologised for attending a ābring your own boozeā party in the Downing Street garden in May 2020, during the first coronavirus lockdown, but insisted he believed it was a work event and could ātechnicallyā have been within the rules.
Mr Johnsonās confirmation that he was at the event led to four Tory MPs publicly calling for him to quit, with more privately voicing concerns about his leadership.
The Prime Minister pulled out of a planned visit to a vaccination centre in Lancashire on Thursday, where he would have faced questions from the media about his actions, because a family member tested positive for coronavirus.
Cabinet minister Brandon Lewis urged people to wait for the outcome of an inquiry by senior civil servant Sue Gray into alleged lockdown-busting parties in No 10 and Whitehall before making judgments on the Prime Ministerās future.
āThe Prime Minister has outlined that he doesnāt believe that he has done anything outside the rules. If you look at what the investigation finds, people will be able to take their own view of that at the time,ā he said.
Cabinet ministers rallied round to defend Mr Johnson, but the late interventions of Foreign Secretary Liz Truss and Chancellor Rishi Sunak ā both tipped as potential successors ā did little to instil confidence in his future.
While Mr Johnson endured a difficult session of Prime Ministerās Questions on Wednesday, Mr Sunak had notably spent the day away from London on a visit in Devon.
But Northern Ireland Secretary Mr Lewis told Sky News: āI have seen Rishi working with the Prime Minister. They work absolutely hand-in-hand. I know that Rishi has got support for the Prime Minister.ā
Mr Lewis insisted Mr Johnson was the right person to be Prime Minister and āI think we will be able to go forward and win a general electionā.
Mr Johnson faced open revolt from one wing of his party, as Scottish Conservative leader Douglas Ross urged him to quit, with almost all Tory MSPs supporting the call.
Mr Ross was dismissed as a ālightweight figureā by Commons Leader Jacob Rees-Mogg following his intervention.
In the House on Thursday, Mr Rees-Mogg defended his comments saying Mr Ross held office in the Conservative Party.
āIt seems to me that people who hold office ought to support the leader of the party. That is the honourable and proper thing to do,ā he said.
In Westminster, three other Tory MPs said Mr Johnson should go ā Sir Roger Gale, former minister Caroline Nokes and chairman of the Public Affairs and Constitutional Affairs Committee William Wragg.
In the Commons on Wednesday the Prime Minister said he recognised āwith hindsight I should have sent everyone back insideā instead of spending 25 minutes in the No 10 garden thanking staff for their work on May 20 2020.
Downing Street insisted he had not been sent an email from his principal private secretary, Martin Reynolds, encouraging colleagues to go to the garden for āsocially distanced drinksā to āmake the most of this lovely weatherā ā and urging them to ābring your own boozeā.
Mr Johnson told MPs?āthere were things we simply did not get right and I must take responsibilityā.
Mr Lewis told BBC Radio 4ās Today programme that the Prime Minister was āvery, very sincereā in his apology for what happened.
āHe does recognise the anger and upset and frustration that people feel at what they perceive happened at No 10,ā Mr Lewis said.
āHe recognises that and takes responsibility.ā
Former minister Philip Dunne told Times Radio: āI think the Prime Minister was quite right to apologise yesterday, and I think it is right that we wait to see what the investigation from Sue Gray establishes.
āPeople will then have to suffer the consequences of whatever happens.ā
For Labour, shadow communities secretary Lisa Nandy told ITVās Good Morning Britain that relatives of those who died during the pandemic are āappalled, horrified and retraumatisedā by the events, asking how senior ministers could have been telling the country what to do during the lockdown āand yet they werenāt doing it themselvesā.
Meanwhile, Mr Johnsonās Government suffered another blow as one of its most effective communicators during the pandemic announced his departure.
Professor Sir Jonathan Van-Tam is to leave his role as Englandās deputy chief medical officer at the end of March.
Sir Jonathan is to take up a new role as the Pro-Vice Chancellor for the faculty of medicine and health sciences at University of Nottingham.