Former Mayor of London Boris Johnson has won the internal vote to become the new leader of the governing Conservative Party, meaning he is due to become the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Wednesday afternoon.

Mr Johnson beat rival Jeremy Hunt by 92,153 to 46,656 votes, Conservative party officials revealed Tuesday afternoon from a meeting in Westminster’s Queen Elizabeth Hall. The scale of the victory exceeds expectations to some degree, far from the 55-45 vote split suggested Tuesday morning.

Making a brief but characteristically bumbling speech to the assembled party members after the results were announced, Mr Johnson said he would: “Deliver Brexit, unite the country, and defeat Jeremy Corbyn. And that’s what we’re going to do… I say to all the doubters, dude! We’re going to energise the country, we’re going to get Brexit done on October 31st and take advantage of all the opportunities it will bring in a new spirit of can-do.

“And once again we are going to believe in ourselves and what we can achieve, and like a slumbering giant we are going to rise and ping off the ropes of self-doubt and negativity with better education, more police, and fantastic full-fibre broadband sprouting in every household we are going to unite this amazing country and we are going to take it forward.”

Update 1430 — Reactions pour in
Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage said that while he wished Mr Johnson well “with his do or die pledge to deliver Brexit on October 31st”, he wondered whether he has “the courage to deliver”.

Likewise, chairman of the Brexit Party Richard Tice asked: “Can we trust him?”

“Boris is not well known for honouring his word on Brexit, since he voted for the terrible Withdrawal Agreement after calling it vassalage,” he added.

Meanwhile, President Trump congratulated Mr Johnson and made a prediction for his future performance, stating “He will be great!”

Read more on these and other reactions at Breitbart London.

The original story continues below

Now the Tory heavyweight has been confirmed as the new leader of the largest party in Britain’s Parliament, a process will be set in play which will see present Prime Minister Theresa May hold her last Prime Minister’s Questions session in Parliament Wednesday at midday before relinquishing power.

After the session, Theresa May is due to travel to Buckingham Palace where she will meet with the Queen and notify the monarch of her stepping down. Mr Johnson will then follow, invited by the Queen to form a government of his own.

The selection process was triggered last month when Theresa May was forced to resign from the Prime Ministership, a position she has desperately clung to for three years despite her repeated missteps, embarrassments, and failures to deliver Brexit as repeatedly promised. Critics said it had been wrong to select a pro-remain politician to deliver Brexit, and Mr Johnson has portrayed himself as a true defender of Brexit in his pitch to become leader instead.

The Conservatives went through five ballots of Conservative Members of Parliament which whittled 14 candidates down to two, which were then put forward for the final vote.

Unlike general elections which choose the composition of Parliament and in which all qualified adults in the country are entitled to vote in, this election has been a purely internal affair for the Conservative party. While the race has been played to the nation across the radio waves and newspaper front pages, actually the decision came down to a self-selected group of less than 200,000 Conservative party members entitled to vote on party affairs.