Boris Johnson said he will not be calling an early election.
The Prime Minister has previously refused to rule out such a move.
Asked in an interview with LBC radio, aired on Friday, whether the idea of an early election is ridiculous, Johnson replied: “Totally, totally.”
He refused to comment further, saying only: “What my job is, is to talk about the Government’s agenda, to talk about policy, to talk about the UK, to talk about how we’re fixing the cost-of-living problems, the cost-of-living crisis, talk about everything we’re doing to strengthen the UK economy, our plan for a stronger economy, which is what I believe in.
READ MORE: Boris Johnson criticised for huge military spending rise amid cost of living crisis
“Talk about levelling up, the agenda for taking this country forward. That’s what I want. That’s what I’m actually meant to talk about.”
He declined to say whether he has two years or two months left as Prime Minister, saying: “I’m going to deliver on our programme.”
Speaking to reporters at the Nato summit in Madrid on Thursday, Mr Johnson repeatedly failed to rule out the prospect of going to the country before the next scheduled election in 2024.
He has claimed he has a new mandate at Westminster following his victory in the confidence vote, despite 41% of his MPs deciding he should go, and was asked whether he will also seek a fresh mandate from the country.
“The idea hadn’t occurred to me,” he said.
His comments come as The Times reports that staff at the Conservative Party headquarters war-gamed the idea of calling a snap election if Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is forced to resign as a result of Durham Police’s investigation into alleged breaches of coronavirus rules.
Johnson is under fresh pressure over sexual misconduct allegations in his party after former Tory deputy chief whip Chris Pincher dramatically quit the role following a drunken incident.
The Prime Minister is facing calls to remove Pincher from the party, which could trigger a by-election in the latter’s Tamworth seat.
That could spell more political uncertainty for Mr Johnson, who faced demands to step down after losing two Conservative seats in by-elections last month.
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