More pressure on Johnson to discuss police visit
Boris Johnson has come under renewed pressure to explain the circumstances of a police visit to his home.
Polls conducted for the Mail on Sunday newspaper before and after Britain's front pages were dominated by the argument showed that Johnson's lead over rival Jeremy Hunt, the foreign minister, had evaporated amongst all voters and had narrowed among supporters of his ruling Conservative Party.
Johnson declined to answer questions about the incident at a hustings for party members on Saturday, saying to applause that the audience wanted instead to hear about his plans for Britain three years after the country voted to leave the European Union.
International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, who is backing Hunt, said the reports should not distract from the policy debate in the race to become the prime minister, which will be decided by 160,000 party members next month.
"I think it's always easier to just give an explanation," he told the BBC's Andrew Marr on Sunday.
"But the key thing then is how you get on to the issues; what we can't have is it being a distraction from explanations about wider polices and where we go to and when."
Hunt, who was campaigning in Scotland on Sunday, told Sky News that Johnson, a former foreign minister and former London mayor, "needs to show he's prepared to answer difficult questions".
"I think someone who wants to be prime minister should answer questions on everything," he said.
Hunt said he was not going to comment on Johnson's private life. "That's for others to make their judgments on," he said.
But he added that Johnson had to engage more in the leadership race, including taking part in more TV debates.
The clear favourite, Johnson had tried to stay out of the limelight during the campaign, and opponents have accused him of running from scrutiny to avoid the gaffes that have been a feature of his career so far.
Johnson, who has a leading Brexit campaigner in the 2016 referendum, on Saturday reiterated his desire to leave the European Union in October with or without a deal.
Hunt, who backed Remain in the referendum, said he would take the country out of the bloc without a deal on Oct. 31 if the EU had not showed it was willing to renegotiate the Brexit deal agreed with May that been rejected three times by parliament.
The EU has repeatedly said it will not renegotiate the withdrawal deal.
Published: by Radio NewsHub