Then on Friday, Mr. Johnson’s Conservative Party lost a seat it had held for more than a century in an election to replace Owen Paterson, one of its lawmakers, who resigned after breaking parliamentary lobbying rules.
Those events have raised speculation about a challenge to Mr. Johnson’s leadership, though most analysts believe that is unlikely to happen imminently, particularly since Parliament is now in recess for the Christmas holiday.
However, the political situation is volatile with speculation that the government could introduce tougher new coronavirus restrictions to curb the spread of the Omicron variant. The rebellion in Parliament on Tuesday underscored the opposition among Conservative lawmakers to any such moves. But on Saturday, Britain registered more than 90,000 coronavirus cases, and there are growing fears that the country’s overstretched health service could be overwhelmed.
Mr. Frost was one of the most hard-line advocates of Brexit, but, despite his combative stand in talks with the European Union, the government has recently backed away from a threat to suspend part of its agreement on post-Brexit trade terms for Northern Ireland. Britain has also dropped its demand to remove the European Court of Justice as the ultimate arbitrator of trade rules.
Speaking to Times Radio, one Conservative lawmaker, Andrew Bridgen, said that Mr. Frost’s resignation would be a “watershed moment” for many of his colleagues and was a “devastating blow for the government and for the prime minister,” adding that Mr. Johnson must “change or go.”
Jenny Chapman, the Labour Party’s shadow minister of state at the Cabinet Office, said on Twitter that the government was “in chaos,” adding, “the country needs leadership not a lame duck PM whose MPs and cabinet have lost faith in him. Boris Johnson needs to apologize to the public and explain what his plan is for the next few weeks.”