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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Boris-johnson_8438.jpeg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:[[WebVideo/FreshyKanal Boris Johnson, superbious]]]]
3
4->''"You can't rule out the possibility that beneath the carefully constructed veneer of a blithering idiot, there lurks... a blithering idiot."''
5-->-- '''Johnson''' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d3EdPPezvzM in an appearance]] on ''Series/{{Top Gear|UK}}''
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7Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson MP (born 19 June 1964 in New York City), sometimes nicknamed "[=BoJo=]" and commonly known simply as "Boris," is a [[UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdom British]] Conservative politician, former [[UsefulNotes/TheMenOfDowningStreet Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] from 2019 to 2022, the Mayor of UsefulNotes/{{London}} from 2008 to 2016, Member of Parliament for Uxbridge and South Ruislip from 2015 to 2023 (and for Henley from 2001 to 2008), the Foreign Secretary from 2016 to 2018, as well as a journalist, novellist, historian, classicist and TV personality. He is easily recognizable by his unruly mop of blond hair, general air of amiable distraction, and tendency to talk like somebody out of Creator/PGWodehouse.
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9He was born in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity to British parents Stanley and Charlotte Johnson, giving him dual [[UsefulNotes/UnitedStates US]]–UK citizenship; he renounced the former in 2015.[[note]]Being born in the United States made him eligible to run to be [[UsefulNotes/ThePresidentsOfTheUnitedStates president]] [[WhatCouldHaveBeen had he wished]]. After selling a home he owned in Britain, he discovered that, because he was born in the United States, he was subject to a US law requiring any citizen, anywhere, to pay income taxes on sales profits even though he had not lived there since he was a child; in disgust, he paid the tax, then promptly renounced his citizenship.[[/note]] He is additionally one of the most ethnically mixed high-ranking global politicians of the 21st century, being not only UsefulNotes/{{Engl|and}}ish, but additionally UsefulNotes/{{Fr|ance}}ench, UsefulNotes/{{German|y}},[[note]]He is a descendant of King George II through an illegitimate daughter of a prince of Württemberg. Through that line he is a sixth cousin twice removed of UsefulNotes/ElizabethII and a fifth cousin twice removed from the line of her grandmother, who was also from a morganatic branch of the Württembergs.[[/note]] UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}n, and UsefulNotes/{{Turk|ey}}ish.[[note]]His great-grandfather was a journalist who was lynched for writing about UsefulNotes/TheArmenianGenocide, and had his grandfather's surname not been changed due to the Ottomans allying with UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, Johnson could have been Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Kemal. There is speculation that this is even the source of his hair color, as Ali Kemal was apparently part-Circassian and from a village where many people used to look like Boris.[[/note]] (He's the whole [[UsefulNotes/TheCrimeanWar Crimean War]] in one messy blond package!) Until the age of eight, he had severely impaired hearing due to a condition known as "glue ear" and was "a subdued child" before it was surgically corrected. He attended Eton College and read Classics at Balliol College, Oxford, where he was elected president of the Oxford Union in 1986. In 1987 he went to work for ''[[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers The Times]]'', but its editor fired him for the false attribution of a quotation. In 1989, he became the UsefulNotes/{{Brussels}} correspondent, and later political columnist, for ''The Daily Telegraph'', then became editor of ''Magazine/TheSpectator'' magazine, ''then'' came to major fame with an appearance on ''Series/HaveIGotNewsForYou''. Ian Hislop had a transcript of a phone call in which Johnson agreed to help an old school friend of his beat up another journalist, which Hislop used to mock Johnson, something Johnson hadn't been expecting. Following this, he claimed in his column that the show was entirely scripted. Later, he reappeared on the show to retract this, reassuring "all the little children out there" that the show was indeed entirely spontaneous, and admitting that he'd agreed to come back [[MoneyDearBoy purely for the money]]. He also appeared later as a repeat guest host.
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11After being elected to Parliament for Henley in 2001,[[note]]When Johnson became editor of ''The Spectator'' in 1999, he had promised its owner Conrad Black that he would not stand to be an MP, a promise he broke during the general election two years later. During his campaign, he told voters that if he was elected he would resign as editor of ''The Spectator''. Again, he failed to keep his word.[[/note]] Johnson served as a shadow junior minister under Conservative leaders Michael Howard and UsefulNotes/DavidCameron. He was fired from his position as editor of ''The Spectator'' in 2005 after management became dissatisfied with his lacklustre performance. He resigned from the House of Commons in 2008 after he was elected mayor of London. He was re-elected as mayor in 2012.
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13In the 2015 national election, Johnson was elected MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip; as a result, he did not seek re-election as mayor the following year. He became a prominent figure in the successful Vote Leave campaign for Brexit in the 2016 referendum on membership of UsefulNotes/TheEuropeanUnion. When David Cameron resigned following Vote Leave's victory, Johnson quickly announced his intention to run for the now vacant post of prime minister. Although he quickly became the favourite to win, he pulled out of the leadership election before it even started when his fellow Brexiteer Michael Gove betrayed him and decided to run himself, claiming that Johnson would not be a capable PM. The erstwhile Remain supporter UsefulNotes/TheresaMay won, then (needing or wanting to keep her enemies closer than her friends) appointed him Foreign Secretary after the referendum; he resigned the position two years later in protest at May's approach to Brexit. Returning to the back benches, Johnson spent the next several months doing his best to destabilise May's position.
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15After May resigned in 2019, Johnson was elected Conservative leader and finally achieved his long-held dream of becoming prime minister. He reopened Brexit negotiations and in early September controversially prorogued Parliament; the Supreme Court ruled the action unlawful later that month. After agreeing to a revised Brexit withdrawal agreement with the EU, but failing to win parliamentary support for the agreement, Johnson called a snap election for December 2019. He led the Conservative Party to victory: they won the most votes in British electoral history after UsefulNotes/JohnMajor's 1992 win; their largest seat share and count since UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher's final win in 1987; and their largest share of the popular vote since Thatcher's first win in 1979. The United Kingdom withdrew from the EU on 31 January 2020, entering a period of transition and trade negotiations. Little sooner had Brexit taken effect, though, than the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic became a major issue of his premiership; the government responded with various emergency powers, introduced measures to mitigate its impact, and approved the rollout of a nationwide vaccination programme. Many scientists criticised Johnson for his slow response to the outbreak, including his resistance to introducing lockdown measures, though others later praised him for the successful implementation of the vaccination programme, as well as relaxing laws to allow fast development of a workable vaccine. He was also criticised for missing five emergency COBRA meetings on how to handle the rapidly approaching pandemic, with it being rumored that he had instead decided to finish writing his [[ScheduleSlip long-overdue]] biography of Creator/WilliamShakespeare.[[note]]It was meant to be [[MeaningfulReleaseDate released in April 2016, to coincide with the 400th anniversary of the Bard's death]]. As of the time he ceased to be an MP in 2023, Johnson still hadn't finished writing it, despite being paid a hefty advance.[[/note]]
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17Despite criticisms of his actions early in the pandemic, his government maintained extremely strong approval ratings from the start of the pandemic all the way through to late 2021, thanks to a combination of the typically British mentality that it's bad form to undermine the government during a time of national crisis, sympathy from Johnson himself having fallen severely ill with the disease, the smooth rollout of the country's COVID vaccination programme, and a post-Brexit mentality among many voters that it was more important for the government to be patriotic than squeaky clean. All these factors contributed to his party enjoying a highly successful round of post-COVID local elections in May 2021, as well as the Conservatives winning the previously safe Labour seat of Hartlepool in a {{landslide|Election}} by-election on the same day.[[note]]Though, in a harbinger of things to come, two months later the Conservatives suffered a surprise loss in what was predicted to be another easy gain from Labour in the Batley & Spen by-election, after health secretary Matt Hancock was caught breaching social distancing regulations the weekend before the by-election... while cheating on his wife, no less. Losing Batley & Spen would have been symbolically devastating for Labour, and for Brexit opponents in general, given that it was where then-MP Jo Cox was assassinated by a far-right extremist in the run-up to the referendum in 2016.[[/note]] Much like UsefulNotes/TonyBlair before him, Johnson earned the nickname "Teflon Boris" for his seeming ability to shrug off any scandal -- best illustrated when Labour Party leader Keir Starmer tried to attack him over an expenses scandal over funds used to refurbish 10 Downing Street just before the aforementioned local elections, and it was ''Starmer'' who found his polling ratings tanking after Johnson dismissed him as an opportunist -- and between that and Brexit, many assumed that he would probably enjoy at least a decade in power. As it turned out, however, he would barely even outlast his immediate predecessor's time in office.
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19Ironically, while (at least some) people felt Johnson had permanently settled [[UsefulNotes/WithEuropeButNotOfIt the "European question"]] that had ended the careers of so many Conservative prime ministers before him (UsefulNotes/HaroldMacmillan, UsefulNotes/EdwardHeath, Thatcher, Major, Cameron, and May had all foundered over Europe in one way or another), he ultimately ended up losing power thanks to the ''other'' thing that had dogged his predecessors, sleaze. The first step towards his downfall came in November 2021, when he attempted to change the parliamentary standards rules in what many saw as an obvious effort to get ally Owen Paterson acquitted for a donations scandal. Johnson and his allies claimed that the investigation was flawed and that Paterson had been persecuted for being a Brexit supporter, but the public refused to buy this, and it began what would soon prove an irreversible decline in the government's polling numbers.
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21Paterson subsequently resigned from Parliament, still maintaining that the investigation that resulted in his suspension was unfair, leading to his theoretically ultra-safe seat, North Shropshire, going to the Liberal Democrats in a subsequent by-election. Two other heavy by-election defeats the following summer, at Wakefield (where Labour reclaimed one of its "heartland" seats the Tories flipped in 2019, which was crucial to that victory) and Tiverton and Honiton (''another'' safe Conservative constituency that went Liberal Democrat), further imperilled Johnson's position. While he wasn't personally implicated in the events that resulted in the Tory incumbents vacating those seats (Imran Ahmad Khan was expelled from the party, then resigned as MP for Wakefield, after being convicted of sexual assault, while Neil Parish resigned as MP for Tiverton and Honiton after he was caught viewing pornography ''in the House of Commons''), they reinforced the image of the Tories as sleaze-ridden -- something they had done a lot to shake off during Cameron's and May's tenures -- at the worst possible time for Johnson.
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23While he was still reeling from the Paterson fiasco, Johnson became embroiled in a more serious controversy when it was revealed that during the pandemic, Johnson violated health restrictions on public gatherings by hosting parties in 10 Downing Street and other government buildings. Known as "Partygate", the scandal made him the first British prime minister to be sanctioned for breaking the law while in office when he received a fixed penalty notice in April 2022 for breach of COVID-19 regulations. Much of the Conservatives' polling and electoral success under his leadership was owed to the party being able to claim that they were now the party of the working-class (mainly because they had delivered Brexit, which the working-class overwhelmingly supported, and also because of a manifesto promise to "level up" economically neglected areas of the country), who were willing to overlook a ''lot'' during his first two years in office, but the close proximity of the Paterson and Partygate scandals irreparably broke Johnson's and the party's image in this regard, leaving many voters annoyed that their support was seemingly being taken for granted. The publishing of a subsequent report on the scandal and a widespread sense of dissatisfaction led to a confidence vote among Conservative [=MPs=] on 6 June 2022, in which 211 supported Johnson and 148 opposed him.[[note]]For perspective, a similar intra-party confidence vote on Theresa May's leadership in December 2018 saw 200 [=MPs=] supporting her and 117 against. For both leaders, the results were bad enough that other people saw them as terminally damaging to their administrations, even if, alone, they failed to oust them.[[/note]]
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25Weeks later, he was forced from office by the Chris Pincher scandal, where he first denied knowing that multiple people had accused Pincher of sexual harassment at the time he appointed him to be Conservative Deputy Chief Whip; then got other cabinet members to tell the media that he didn't know about the allegations as well; then was forced to admit that he'd known about them all along. The ensuing mass resignations (62 [=MPs=] resigned from government positions in all, including 36 in a 24-hour period, a record in British history) ''finally'' forced him to announce his own departure. Despite Brexit being a huge part of his political legacy, he is the first Conservative PM since UsefulNotes/AlecDouglasHome whose departure from Number 10 was ''not'' a byproduct of Britain's relationship with Europe.
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27He was replaced as PM by the winner of the September 2022 Conservative Party leadership contest, UsefulNotes/LizTruss, the UK's third woman to hold the office, two days before the passing of Queen UsefulNotes/ElizabethII. However, in October, after Truss herself was driven from office after a short and disastrous tenure, Johnson attempted to mount a comeback and declared his candidacy for the next leadership election. This was met with ambivalence among the Tory electorate: some thought he could get the country back on track since he could claim a mandate through his victory at the last general election, while others felt his presence would remind the public of his various failings, which would just weaken the Tories even further after the Truss debacle. Ultimately, he withdrew from consideration despite previously declaring that he had the 100 votes in the Parliamentary party necessary to stand [[note]] This requirement was added by the powerful 1922 committee of backbench Conservative MPs nominally to prevent a drawn out leadership contest, but given Johnson's widespread popularity with the party membership, it was widely recognised as a ploy to prevent the Return of the Boris [[/note]] -- a claim that was generally met with scepticism. Consequently, UsefulNotes/RishiSunak was acclaimed as leader of the Conservative Party on 24 October.
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29Johnson remained on the Tory backbenches for some time, becoming a thorn in Sunak's side via all sorts of public announcements about what he felt the government ought to do, complicating Sunak's efforts in areas such as the war in UsefulNotes/{{Ukraine}} and sorting out the UsefulNotes/NorthernIreland situation with respect to Brexit. He eventually resigned from his seat in June 2023 as continued investigations into his conduct while he was PM -- including charges that he hosted in-person parties during COVID lockdowns, and crucially, that he lied to Parliament about said parties -- which looked like they might get him ejected,[[note]]The Privileges Committee recommended that Johnson be suspended for 90 days, far longer than the 15-day minimum needed to enable a recall petition in his constituency, which would in turn trigger a by-election if it attracted enough signatures.[[/note]] intensified. Ironically, considering the crushing series of parliamentary by-election defeats that the party experienced throughout 2022 and 2023, Johnson's former seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip was the one seat[[note]]Not counting Southend West, which the Tories won essentially uncontested after the assassination of Sir David Amess; this was a safe constituency for them and, by convention, other major parties do not contest by-elections that happen because of murder.[[/note]] the Tories ''didn't'' lose in this period, though most people attributed it, rightly or wrongly, more to a controversial emissions tax that was due to be imposed on older vehicles in London than anything to do with Johnson.
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31----
32!!Books he has written
33* ''Friends, Voters, Countrymen: Jottings on the Stump'' (2001)
34* ''Johnson's Column'' (2003)
35* ''Lend Me Your Ears'' (2003)
36* ''Seventy-Two Virgins'' (2004)
37* ''Aspire Ever Higher''/''University Policy for the 21st Century'' (2006)
38* ''The Dream of Rome'' (2006)
39* ''Have I Got Views for You'' (2006)
40* ''Life in the Fast Lane: The Johnson Guide to Cars'' (2007)
41* ''The Perils of the Pushy Parents: A Cautionary Tale'' (2007)
42* ''Johnson's Life of London'' (2011)
43* ''The Churchill Factor: How One Man Made History'' (2014)
44
45!!In Media
46
47Johnson's political career has been the subject of several television docudramas, with varying actors playing him:
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49* Stuart [=McQuarrie=] in the 2005 television film ''A Very Social Secretary''.
50* Christian Brassington in the 2009 drama documentary ''When Boris Met Dave''.
51* Will Barton in the 2017 [[Creator/TheBBC BBC]] drama ''Theresa vs. Boris: How May Became PM''.
52* Richard Goulding in the 2019 Creator/{{HBO}}[=/=]Creator/Channel4 drama ''Film/BrexitTheUncivilWar''.
53* Creator/KennethBranagh in the 2022 Creator/{{Sky}} Atlantic television drama'' This England''.
54* In Creator/Channel4's drama ''Film/{{Partygate}}'', real news footage of Johnson is mixed with dramatised scenes where he's TheFaceless, voiced by Creator/JonCulshaw.
55* Johnson is the protagonist of Creator/JonathanMaitland's play ''Theatre/TheLastTemptationOfBorisJohnson'', with Will Barton playing him in the original production.
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57Likewise, he has also been the subject of parody, mainly due to his bumbling mannerisms and distinctive hairstyle:
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59* In the 2008–2012 children's TV cartoon ''WesternAnimation/BenAndHollysLittleKingdom'', the mayor of Fairy Town, voiced by Creator/AlexanderArmstrong, is based on Johnson, who was mayor of London at the time.
60* Johnson is voiced by Lewis [=MacLeod=] in the fourth and fifth series of ''WesternAnimation/TwoDTV'' as well as the radio revival of ''Series/DeadRingers''.
61* [=MacLeod=] reprises his voice role as Johnson in the puppet/CGI sketch series ''Series/{{Newzoids}}''.
62* He is voiced by Creator/JonCulshaw in ''Headcases''. In it, Johnson is portrayed as a half-man half-dog who would rather engage in acts of canine behaviour, such as chase his tail, than answer questions.
63* In 2019, Creator/JamesCorden portrayed Johnson in a sketch on ''Series/SaturdayNightLive''.
64* In the 2020 revival of ''Series/SpittingImage'', Johnson's puppet is voiced by Matt Forde.
65* In ''Series/TheUndeclaredWar'', set in [[NextSundayAD 2024]], Boris Johnson is mentioned to have been forced out of office 15 months before after losing a confidence vote. Ironically, while the series was airing, Boris Johnson did have to resign, even though he'd won a confidence vote just before the series began airing.
66* For the fifteenth anniversary of the Revival Series of ''Series/DoctorWho'', Creator/RussellTDavies wrote an epilogue to his novelization of its debut story, [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E1Rose "Rose"]], where the Nestene Consciousness merges with the corpse of a man heavily implied to be Johnson, who in-universe was killed during the Auton attack.
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68He has even been the subject of British music and music media:
69
70* Music/RobbieWilliams plays Boris in the music video for his 2020 festive single "Can't Stop Christmas".
71* Johnson is the subject of the 2020 song "Boris Johnson Is a Fucking [[CountryMatters Cunt]]" by Music/KuntAndTheGang. It reached number five on the UK Singles Chart. The group released a sequel song, "Boris Johnson Is Still a Fucking Cunt", in 2021; it too reached number five in the chart.
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73----
74!!Tropes applied to Boris Johnson's works and appearances in media:
75* AuthorAvatar: In the mid-noughties, while he was an opposition MP, he wrote a novel called ''Seventy-Two Virgins'', which stars [[https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/jul/17/boris-johnson-seventy-two-virgins-novel "a tousled, bicycling Tory MP who believes everything is up for grabs"]]. Sound familiar?
76* ColbertBump: Johnson's appearance on an April 1998 episode of ''Series/HaveIGotNewsForYou'' is credited as being what brought him to a far wider audience; emphasising a bumbling upper-class persona, he was viewed as entertaining and invited back on to later episodes, including as a guest presenter. After these, members of the public came to recognise him on the street, and he was invited to appear on other television shows, such as ''Series/{{Top Gear|UK}}'', ''Parkinson'', ''Breakfast with Frost'', and ''Series/QuestionTime''.
77* FirstNameBasis: {{Subverted|Trope}}. In media portrayals of him, he usually goes by the name "Boris", the only British political figure to be portrayed this way outside of the Royal Family. However, he started going by the name "Boris" when he arrived at Eton in 1977, prior to which he had gone by his actual first name "Alex" (his full name being Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson). Although most treat "Boris" as his first name, the trope that's actually in play in the media is therefore MiddleNameBasis.
78* ItsAllAboutMe: One sceptical [[https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-churchill-factor-how-one-man-made-history-by-boris-johnson-book-review-all-about-our-greatest-leader-and-a-bit-about-churchill-9816767.html review]] of his book about UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill was subtitled "All about our greatest leader (plus a bit about Churchill)", because of the amount of time Johnson spent in the book talking about himself.
79* PoliticianGuestStar: He appeared so frequently on ''Series/HaveIGotNewsForYou'' that they produced a DVD collection with his appearances called ''The Full Boris''.

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