Boris Johnson comes back fighting in first PMQs after surviving confidence vote | Politics News

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Boris Johnson has said he is getting on with the job as he came back fighting in his first PMQs after surviving a confidence vote.

The prime minister entered the House of Commons to cheers, just two days after he won a vote by his own MPs – although 41% voted to oust him as leader.

However, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said he “couldn’t make out whether that introductory noise was cheers or boos” and if they were directed at him or the PM.

Mr Johnson came out fighting as he insisted his administration would create “high wage, high skilled jobs” for the country.

“And as for jobs, I’m going to get on with mine,” he told MPs.

In a particularly rowdy start to Prime Minister’s Questions, Labour’s Angela Eagle said the confidence vote showed how loathed the PM is “and that’s only in his own party”, to roars from the Labour benches.

But Mr Johnson brushed that off, saying in a long political career “I have of course picked up political opponents all over” because the government has done some “big remarkable things”.

Labour MP Afzal Khan used Mr Johnson’s comments about getting on with the job against him, saying he would have more sympathy for that claim “if it actually started in the first place” – to which Mr Johnson pulled a face and muttered under his breath.

Mr Khan was referring to long waits for passports as well as cancelled flights and long delays, which he said could cost families £1 billion.

Mr Johnson said 91% of people are getting their passports back within six weeks, more staff are being placed in airports and said Labour has not condemned the RMT strike later this month which will see more than 40,000 rail staff walking out over three days.

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