japanese prime minister, shinzo abe. he was shot dead at a political campaign event last week. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the broadcaster david davies and anna mikhailova, who s the deputy political editor of the mail on sunday. welcome to you both. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. starting with the conservative leadership race, the ft says rishi sunak will only cut taxes once inflation is under control. the guardian focuses on the uber whistle blower who leaked thousands of company files to uk politicians to help change transport policy in london. the yorkshire post reports that the former chancellor, rishi sunak, will not make any immediate tax cuts if he becomes prime minister. the mail says foreign secretary liz truss urged mps to back her over rishi sunak. the times says mr sunak has vowed to cut taxes, but only once inflation has fallen. the paper also says support for liz truss is growing am
to the country today, this as johnson has been rocked by a new wave of resignations. joining us now from london, nada bashir. good morning, we ve been following these developments the past few hours. what do we know so far about the reports that johnson will step down? reporter: good morning, christine. just gone 10:00 a.m. here in london and clearly a lot has happened. boris johnson now expected to stand down from his post as prime minister. we are expecting him according to downing street to make a statement in the coming hours. we re also waiting for that lectern to come out here to address the press, give that statement announcing his resignation. we understand that he spoke with the chairman of the 1922 committee, that is the committee of back bench members of parliament here in the conservative party who would oversee the process of both the prime minister resigning and of course that potential vote of confidence. but it hasn t reached that stage. the prime minister n
can. and to you, the british public, i know that there will be many people who are relieved and perhaps quite a few who also will be disappointed and i want you to know how sad i am to be giving up the best job in the world. but them s the breaks. remarkable developments, just three years after his party won a huge mandate in parliament, it is important to note that johnson gave no timetable for exactly when he will leave office, saying that will be announced next week. let s bring in cnn s nic robertson, outside number 10 downing street. so tell us, first of all, your reaction to johnson s words as he finally under intense pressure, we should note, from inside his own party, to step down. this feels like a place holding resignation and less a resignation from power, because it is behind the doors there, appointing replacement ministers for all those who have quit. more a he is resigned to the fact that his party no longer wants him. last night he was talking about and ev
discriminatory to lgbtq americans. exactly what this is. new video shows 500 migrants illegally crossing into texas. a dangerous migrant land route on the face of the earth. british media reporting prime minister boris johnson has agreed to resign. the move would end stalemate over the latest scandal to rock the prime minister s office. pressure pushing down on me pushing down on you under pressure steve: perfect song to start this hour live from london where it is five hours ahead, 11:00 in the morning. you are listening to queen and david bowie sing about under pressure which is what is happening to boris johnson. today the headline is bojo going to go. welcome to the mezzanine level. fox & friends hour on this seventh day of the seventh month. rachel: good morning pete, good morning, brian. happy to be in for ainsley this morning. brian: looking for prime minister in england. steve: you applied. brian: i m thinking about it looking at the engl
great to have you here. was it in your opinion the economy ultimately or did boris johnson just lie himself out of office? your thoughts. partly policy. he was elected as a conservative but governed as a liberal. the state increased taxes went up. the net zero agenda was putting out the price of energy. we weren t self-sufficient. and there s policy considerations here. ultimately in the united kingdom tell untruths. you cannot tell lies and get away with it. it started over the parties governing at number 10 downing street when the rest of us were living under draconian lock down. we continue visit our moms, for example. over the sex scandal involving a senior conservative politician and in the end, people just said he s lied to us. that is not good enough. we ve had enough. we saw support just disappear over the course of the last two or three days. trace: to those that say it wasn t as much the scandals or the lying or the appointment of his chief deputy whip, chris pi