British Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday said she enjoyed the "full support" of her cabinet after a former Conservative Party chairman admitted he was behind a plot by around 30 MPs to urge her to resign. "What the country needs is calm leadership and that's what I'm providing with the full support of my cabinet," May told reporters in her constituency in Maidenhead, west of London.
Grant Shapps, identified as the ringleader of the effort to oust May after a faltering performance at the party's conference this week and cabinet infighting over Brexit, said there was growing momentum behind calls for her to step down. Shapps said five former ministers were part of the move to oust May and some current ministers also "support it", although other senior party figures contradicted him.
"A growing number of my colleagues, we realise that the solution isn't to bury our heads in the sand and just hope things will get better," Shapps told BBC radio. Asked about the plot, he said: "Are there cabinet members aware? Yes. Do some support it? Yes."
"It will have to be her decision. I had rather hoped that we would be able to get to the point where we could go to her privately and have this conservation," said Shapps, an MP and former minister. He added there was increasing support among a "broad spread" of MPs for a leadership contest in the first open declaration of an organised effort to oust May since her poor performance in a June general election. Her leadership has also been strained in recent weeks by Boris Johnson, the foreign secretary, who publicly undermined efforts to present a united front over Brexit with several newspaper columns and interviews setting out his own stance on the issue.