Tory MPs reacted angrily to
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's U-turn on Thursday, when he scrapped plans to stop Conservative lawmaker Owen Paterson being suspended from parliament for lobbying on behalf of companies that had paid him more than £500,000 ($682,882).
The former secretary of state for Northern Ireland was facing a 30-day suspension from the Commons for "repeatedly" breaching lobbying rules over his paid consultancy work on behalf of the clinical diagnostics company Randox, and Lynn's Country Foods, a meat processor and distributor.
The UK media cited unnamed senior Tory sources as saying that the developments raise serious questions about Johnson's judgment and leaves
the entire Conservative Party tarnished by "sleaze".
Some sources minced no words when commenting on the news that Tory Chief Whip Mark Spencer is currently under pressure to resign amid corruption accusations against the Conservative Party, which is purportedly creating "one rule for us, another rule for everyone else".
The Times quoted unnamed insiders as suggesting that the government is trying to throw Spencer under the bus so as to absolve Johnson of responsibility.
The view was echoed by a Cabinet minister, who insisted that Johnson should have made Paterson "turn up and accept his punishment" instead of putting the full might of the government machine behind him.
One more senior minister claimed that the political debacle was "completely avoidable" and that "the problem with Boris is he packs his Cabinet with second-rate people, meaning there is no one to tell him he should take a different course".
One Tory MP told The Independent that he holds "the prime minister, chief whip, and leader of the Commons [Jacob Rees-Mogg] jointly culpable", adding, "if I was the chief whip, I would hang my head in shame and resign".
Former Chief Whip Mark Harper has, meanwhile, described the developments as "one of the most unedifying episodes I have seen in my 16 years as an MP".
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, for his part, urged Johnson to apologise to the nation for a "grubby attempt to cover up for the misdemeanour of his friend" after an "unbelievable 24 hours even by this government's chaotic standards".
The remarks follow Paterson announcing his resignation a day after his colleagues voted to overrule his suspension for alleged paid lobbying.
The announcement came after government sources argued that a re-run of Wednesday night's vote would be held, with the expectation that the punishment of Paterson's 30-day suspension would be reimposed.
Prime Minister Johnson, for his part, was accused of "corruption" following the vote to protect Paterson from being suspended over alleged violations of the House of Commons' rules on lobbying.