Boris Johnson is reportedly on flight BA2156 from the Dominican Republic to London Gatwick.
He’s currently due to land at 10:1 am, where he is expected to say whether he intends to join the leadership race. That can only mean one thing…that’s right, the flight tracker is back.
Boris Johnson was spotted last night on a British Airways flight from the Dominican Republic to London Gatwick, amid reports that he plans to join the Tory leadership contest.
He’s reportedly sitting in economy class with his wife Carrie and their children, on the flight with the callsign BA2156. It is due to land at around 10.30am today.
Sky’s Mark Stone said Johnson was booed by other passengers as passengers boarded the plane.
He boarded before everybody else, on his own with his wife and two children. There was a mixed reaction, he was behind a glass area, as we were waiting inside the gate, we saw him the other side of the glass, there was a few boos, a few people looking slightly bewildered.
I think there was an expectation of some of the holidaymakers here that he would be on the plane, but there was one or two boos, he wouldn’t have heard them because he was on the other side of the glass.
Good morning. Rishi Sunak became the first Tory leadership candidate to reportedly secure the backing of 100 MPs needed to go through in the race on Friday night.
Boris Johnson is on his way back to London from his Caribbean holiday to drum up support among MPs in his audacious bid to return to Downing Street.
Neither Johnson nor Sunak have yet formally declared, while Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the House of Commons, became the first to announce she was standing on Friday.
I’m L?onie Chao-Fong and I’ll be taking you through the latest in British politics for the next few hours. You can get in touch with questions or comments on Twitter or by email.
In the meantime, Here is where things stood on Friday evening:
Rishi Sunak reportedly has the backing of the 100 MPs needed to go through in the race. He is yet to formally declare his candidacy, and the Guardian’s count has him on 88 MPs, but Tobias Ellwood claimed that he had helped the former chancellor cross the threshold.
Among Sunak’s backers to declare on Friday were Matt Hancock, Tom Tugendhat and Sajid Javid.
Boris Johnson is on his way back from a holiday in the Dominican Republic, as he trails Sunak. The former prime minister has already secured the backing of six cabinet ministers, including Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Johnson was reportedly booed as he boarded the plane home, according to Sky News. He is due to land at London Gatwick at around 10.30am today.
A Johnson-supporting MP has said Johnson told him he is “up for it” and will fly back to the UK from his Caribbean holiday to stand in the Tory leadership contest.
Lord William Hague, the former Conservative party leader, has said that Johnson’s election would send the party into a “death spiral”.
Former Daily Telegraph editor and biographer of Margaret Thatcher, Lord Charles Moore, who is an ally of Johnson has urged him not to run in the contest and “sit this one out”.
Penny Mordaunt officially launched her leadership bid, saying she had been “encouraged by support from colleagues who want a fresh start, a united party and leadership in the national interest.”
Polling by Opinium suggests that Sunak will beat Mordaunt and Johnson in a leadership contest, and that Mordaunt will also beat Johnson.