Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Explainer: Who is Boris Johnson?
Explainer: Who is Boris Johnson?
Dec 6, 2025 11:46 PM

Boris Johnson, a champion of free trade and lower taxes, will serve as the next prime minister of the UK beginning on Wednesday, July 24. Officials announced on Tuesday that Johnson won 66.4 percent of the Conservative Party’s popular vote, besting rival Jeremy Hunt 92,153 votes to 46,656.

In his victory speech, Johnson thanked his opponent, Jeremy Hunt, for being “a font of good idaeas, all of which I propose to steal,.” He also praised outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May for “her legacy” of achievements, which pointedly did not include Brexit.

He vowed to deliver Brexit, united the UK, defeat Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn in a ing general election, and energize the nation.

His remarks made clear he will not seek another extension before leaving the European Union. “We’re going to get Brexit done on October 31,” he promised. “We are going to take advantage of all the opportunities that it will bring in a new spirit of can do.”

President Donald Trump became the first foreign leader to congratulate Johnson, saying his close friend will be a “great” prime minister and “straighten out” the “disaster” Theresa May made of Brexit negotiations. Supporters have said a Trump-Johnson relationship could touch off a new partnership akin to that of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s. (First, Johnson will have to appoint a new ambassador to the U.S. to replace Kim Darroch, who resigned after the media leaked his caustic remarks about Trump.)

Who is Boris Johnson, and what does he mean for taxes, trade, and the economic principles that lead to human flourishing?

Early life

Prime Minister-designate Boris Johnson was born Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson in New York City on June 19, 1964. The 55-year-old held dual citizenship until 2006.

Boris Johnson will e the first prime minister of the UK who had been baptized Roman Catholic, by his mother, Charlotte Fawcett. However, he later received confirmation in the Anglican church.

Johnson hails from a political family. His father, Stanley Johnson, served as a Conservative Member of European Parliament (MEP) and worked for the World Bank and the European Commission. His paternal great-grandfather, Ali Kemal Bey, was an Ottoman journalist and politician who opposed the Armenian Genocide before being assassinated.

Boris attended Eton, then graduated from Oxford University. He was said to be a “celebrity” even during his days as a rowdy schoolboy, which presaged his larger-than-life political persona. After graduating, Johnson worked as a journalist at the Times and then the Telegraph, where he focused on exposing unreasonable EU regulations. His critics accuse him of mendacity for some of those stories, as well as for implying EU dues could be redirected to boost NHS funding during the 2016 Leave campaign. Johnson later edited The Spectator magazine.

Political success and Brexit

Johnson’s main political success came from serving two terms as mayor of London, defeating “Red” Ken Livingstone, a socialist who went on to give surprisingly positive assessments of terrorists and Adolf Hitler, in 2008. As mayor, Johnson replaced all the ticket takers for the London Underground with automated machines, saving taxpayers £270 million. Although workers called a strike to protest the move, Johnson allowed 86 percent muters to reach work. He also allowed businesses to remain open longer on Sundays during while he oversaw the successful 2012 Olympics.

He found himself conflicted on Brexit but ultimately joined the Leave side – and became a leader of the Leave campaign. The success threw David Cameron out of power and brought Theresa May into party leadership.

In 2016, May appointed Johnson Foreign Secretary. His biggest mistake came in late 2017, when he said that Iran had jailed dual UK-Iranian citizen Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe in April 2016 for training journalists. She had always denied the allegation. She remains jailed in Iranian custody.

Boris Johnson resigned as Foreign Secretary after Theresa May revealed her Brexit strategy at the Chequers summit last July. He said May’s negotiation strategy left Brexit “dying, suffocated by needless self-doubt.” Her agreement to the backstop and willingness to remain subject to regulations passed by Brussels after Brexit meant the UK was “truly headed for the status of colony” of the EU.

es next

Boris Johnson has long been a champion of a “global Britain” hashing out free trade agreements with partners around the world.

He has staked out a tough negotiating posture with the EU, threatening to withhold the £38 billion “divorce bill” and leave without a free trade agreement if Brussels does not offer more conciliatory terms after Brexit. Michel Barnier, who oversaw Brexit negotiations, said Theresa May “never” threatened to leave the EU without a deal, giving Brussels leverage to drive a hard bargain. Johnson has warned the EU that punitive tariffs against the UK would represent a “return to Napoleon’s continental system.”

Johnson is also a believer in lower taxes and regulations. Last year, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) awarded its prestigious Irving Kristol Award to Boris Johnson.

He has proposed lightening the e tax burden by raising the e subject to the 40 percent e tax from £50,000 ($63,400 U.S.) to £80,000 ($101,500). The change will remove hundreds of thousands of Brits from the highest tax bracket.

Johnson promised to reverse the “continuing creep of the nanny state.” He has vowed to reduce sin taxes on fatty, sugary food, which he said “clobber those who can least afford it.” Even as May released a new report on Monday pledging to raise a host of new sin taxes and to end all smoking by 2030, Johnson remained steadfast.

However, Johnson proposed increased NHS funding during the Brexit campaign. He also advocates raising education spending to at least £5,000 for every secondary school student. During the Conservative Party hustings, Johnson reaffirmed his longstanding support for “a woman’s right to choose” and LGBT rights.

Johnson has not formally addressed when he will prorogue Parliament (sending MPs into recess) in order to enact a “no-deal Brexit.” However, his promise to “unite” the Conservative Party underscores the widening divisions splitting Tory ranks. Multiple Cabinet ministers have resigned in anticipation of being forcibly returned to the backbenches. Hammond is literally blocking Johnson from moving into his apartment, the slightly larger quarters at Number 11, by leaving his furniture in place until the weekend. The move serves as a metaphor for former and current Tory Remainers who oppose to a so-called “hard Brexit.” Rory Stewart has threatened to bring down Johnson just months into his leadership if he makes such a move.

Yet critics say Johnson’s biggest enemy may be within. His opponents, and some of his supporters, say Boris Johnson has been disorganized professionally and led a personal life as messy as his touseled hair. He divorced his first wife, Allegra Mostyn-Owen, after six years of marriage. Boris married Marina Wheeler 12 days later – five weeks before she gave birth to his first child. They had a total of four children together – two boys, two girls. Johnson had a string of highly publicized infidelities, including a 2004 affair with Petronella Wyatt that resulted in an abortion, and an affair with Helen MacIntyre who gave birth to a love child in 2009. Johnson and Wheeler announced the end of their marriage in 2018. His present girlfriend, Carrie Symonds, is expected to continue cohabiting with him in Number 10 Downing Street.

Johnson plans to lay out a more detailed vision of his leadership strategy in a national speech on Wednesday.

If he succeeds in opening the UK to the opportunities of Brexit, it will advance global free trade, improve the living standards of its trading partners in the Global South, and set back international institutions promoting economic regimentation from afar.

Brown / . Editorial use only.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Tom Coburn: Remembering an American statesman
A “statesman” is defined as “a wise, skillful, and respected political leader.” On March 28, America lost such a person when former U.S. Representative, Senator, and Doctor Tom Coburn died at the age of 72. Statesmen (and women) are needed in times of pandemic-induced uncertainty. Here’s how Coburn exhibited the traits necessary to be a statesman. Coburn was a member of the 1994 “Republican Revolution,” which came to town promising change and self-imposed term limits. He was one of the...
Acton Line rebroadcast: Russell Kirk and the genesis of American Conservatism
Russell Kirk has long been known as perhaps the most important founding father of the American conservative movement in the second half of the twentieth century. In the early 1950s, America had emerged from the Great Depression and the onset of the New Deal, and was facing the rise of radical ideologies abroad; the American Right seemed beaten, broken, and adrift. Then in 1953, Russell Kirk released his masterpiece, The Conservative Mind. More than any other published work of the...
‘They want to punish the Church’: Italian priest fined for procession to fight coronavirus
The following translation is an exclusive interview that appeared in the weekend edition of the northern Italian daily La Nuova Bussola Quotidiana, which has fiercely defended Italy’s religious freedom throughout the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Correspondent Andrea Zambrano interviewed a Roman Catholic parish priest, Rev. Domenico Cirigliano, who was slapped with a €400 fine by local police for processing with a “miraculous” crucifix. Rev. Cirigliano said he was performing essential “work” by blessing the town of Rocca Imperiale in order to...
Bernie Sanders drops out, but socialism marches on
Senator Bernie Sanders suspended his presidential campaign on Wednesday. Sanders faced insurmountable problems in the Democratic primaries, but his socialism was not one of them. Arguably, the substance of his campaign, with his enthusiastic speaking style, was his greatest selling point. Had the 78-year-old white male belonged to a different sexual, racial, or age demographic, he almost certainly would have cleared the field. Even suffering from the burden of “privilege,” it’s not totally inconceivable that Sanders could have closed his...
COVID-19 could inspire an ‘age of dispersion’ from megacities
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the constraints of “social distancing” have inspired new waves of innovation across spheres and sectors. “Life will never be the same” has e mon refrain—an ominous nod to the steady “Zoomification” of everyday life and its looming influence on the future of work, school, church, the family and beyond. The transformation in how we live is bound to have an impact on where we live, as well. Given that densely populated cities are reporting...
COVID-19 reminds us work is not just about money
We’re starting to have serious discussions about how and when to get our economy moving again. But like the medical response to the COVID-19 virus, the prospective economic cures are tentative, often conflicting and invariably contentious. Flat lining the world’s largest economy indefinitely is not an option. Another 6.6 million Americans were added to the jobless rolls, the Labor Department reported today. The United States has lost 10% of the workforce in three weeks. President Donald Trump, who said in...
Bernie Sanders, AOC would ‘cure’ COVID-19 with ‘short-term’ socialism
California Governor Gavin Newsom raised eyebrows last week when he told Bloomberg News that he sees the global coronavirus pandemic as an “opportunity” for “reimagining a progressive era as it pertains to capitalism.” As if to flesh out this notion Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and socialists on both sides of the Atlantic have unveiled multi-trillion-dollar programs suggesting that the best antidote to COVID-19 is short-term socialism. Sanders’ operatives made one last push to breathe life into his presidential campaign by...
How to keep your bearings in a crisis
As the COVID-19 epidemic continues to sweep the world, people are experiencing rapid changes in all spheres of their lives. Change is mon thread of my writing on this epidemic: changes people made to protect others, changes we are called to make to grow in wisdom, and changes we are called to make to our knowledge and skills in order to meet new economic challenges and serve our neighbors’ needs. Change in all of these dimensions of life is both...
Thomas Aquinas versus Adrian Vermeule
The relationship between law, morality, and liberty is one of those topics that invariably generates fierce debate. And it usually plays out in very predictable ways. On the one hand, there are some whose first instinct is to lurch for prehensive legal response to any number of moral evils to which legal coercion may not be the most optimal or even just response: “There ought to be a law against that!” The free choice to lie, for example, is always...
Innovation vs. intervention during the coronavirus crisis
What sort of innovation, rather than government intervention, e from the current crisis? What sort of long-term changes might we see in medicine and education? Rev. Robert Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute, shares his views on what e. Be sure to check out the other videos in this series, linked below. Thoughts from Rev. Robert Sirico during the coronavirus pandemic How freer markets can help during the coronavirus crisis with Rev. Robert Sirico Government bailouts and debt:...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved