Boris spends his final days as PM while Carrie Johnson takes Wilfred to Port Lympne Safari Park


Today, my mother will take me to the zoo while my father finishes his job. Carrie Johnson takes her son Wilfred to a nature park as Boris spends his final days as prime minister.

Carrie Johnson is pictured enjoying a day out at Port Lympne Reserve in Kent with her son Wilfred while her husband Boris gave his final major policy speech in Suffolk, urging for more nuclear power investment amid the cost of living crisis

Carrie Johnson is pictured enjoying a day out at Port Lympne Reserve in Kent with her son Wilfred while her husband Boris gave his final major policy speech in Suffolk, urging for more nuclear power investment amid the cost of living crisis

She looked in good spirits as she went for a stroll in the 600 acres of Kentish Savanna where adult tickets cost £29 and child tickets cost £26 for entrance which includes a truck safari which they also took. Pictured: Carrie, 34, texting

Carrie with a friend going on safari at the breeding sanctuary for rare and endangered animals

The safari truck is seen driving through the 600 acres of Kentish Savanna to see animals

Carrie Johnson, age 34, was sighted visiting the Port Lympne Safari Park in Kent with her two-year-old son, Wilfred.

She also has a second child, the couple’s eight-month-old daughter Romy, who was not seen on the outing.

The political couple is reported to be residing at Chequers during Boris’s last days as prime minister.

After Boris Johnson’s resignation the following week, either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak will be the next prime minister on Tuesday.

Carrie Johnson was seen with her son Wilfred to a nature park when her husband Boris Johnson served his final days as prime minister.

Carrie, age 34, was seen visiting the Port Lympne Safari Park in Kent with her two-year-old child, Wilfred, on a visit to the breeding refuge for rare and endangered species.

She seemed to be in high spirits as she strolled around the 600 acres of Kentish Savanna, where admission costs £29 for adults and £26 for children and includes a vehicle safari, which they also participated in.

Today, the departing prime minister was in Suffolk at a nuclear power plant, where he encouraged his successor to “go nuclear, go big” and pledged £700 million to develop Sizewell C in Suffolk.

Mr. Johnson, his third wife, their eight-month-old daughter Romy, and Wilf are reported to be living at Chequers, the country residence of the Prime Minister in Buckinghamshire, a two-hour drive from the safari park until his tenure ends on Tuesday.

On Monday, either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak will win the Tory leadership campaign, and the Queen will select the next prime minister the following day.

Carrie Johnson is spotted enjoying a day out in Port Lympne Reserve in Kent with her son Wilfred, as her husband Boris Johnson delivered his final big policy address in Suffolk, urging for further nuclear power investment in the midst of the cost of living crisis.

She seemed to be in high spirits as she strolled around the 600 acres of Kentish Savanna, where admission costs £29 for adults and £26 for children and includes a vehicle safari, which they also participated in. 34-year-old Carrie is seen texting.

Carrie and her pal are going on safari at the rare and endangered wildlife sanctuary.

The safari vehicle is shown traversing the 600-acre Kentish Savanna to see wildlife.

The Johnsons are reported to have departed Downing Street in August, when removal trucks were discovered parked outside No10, and aides indicated that ‘transition’ to the new leader was in progress.

The Prime Minister is permitted to remove any of the items he purchased personally as part of the contentious redesign of the No. 11 house, including the £800-per-roll gold wallpaper.

It has been claimed that the departing prime minister has been house-hunting in Dulwich Village for a new home for his family as he prepares to step down as prime minister the next week.

The announcement that the Queen would preside over the event at Balmoral (above) raises new health worries for her.

In 2019, Queen Elizabeth II welcomed newly-elected Conservative Party leader Boris Johnson at an audience at Buckingham Palace in London.

The result of the Tory leadership campaign will be declared on Monday; either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak (both shown at the last hustings) will go to the Scottish Highlands on Tuesday to be asked to form a government.

Mr. Johnson (seen today on his visit to EDF’s Sizewell B Nuclear power facility in Sizewell, Suffolk) will go on his final day as Prime Minister to Balmoral to officially resign to the Queen after delivering a farewell address in front of No10 at 8.30am on Tuesday.

Boris criticizes Tony Blair and Gordon Brown for neglecting to invest in nuclear power.

In his last major policy address as Prime Minister, the departing prime minister expressed “full confidence” that the bill will pass in the coming weeks.

As Russian President Vladimir Putin wreaks havoc on global oil and gas markets, Mr. Johnson cautioned that it would be “total folly” not to proceed with the nuclear project.

He expressed confidence that his successor, whether it be Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak, will renounce the “short-termism” and “myopia” that impeded the previous government’s energy security policies.

The Prime Minister also criticized Additional Labour’s performance on creating new nuclear power in the United Kingdom, accusing Tony Blair and Gordon Brown of doing “absolutely nothing” during their 13 years in government.

“Thanks a lot, Tony, and thanks a lot, Gordon,” he remarked, before taking a shot at former Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg for his opposition to additional nuclear plants.

The Sizewell C project is being pushed despite strong local resistance, but Mr. Johnson described demonstrations held outside the location where he was speaking as “pure nimbyism.”

It may be “catastrophic” for species at the RSPB’s neighboring Minsmere nature reserve, where some of Britain’s rarest birds have only escaped extinction thanks to the reedbeds.

Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats criticized Mr. Johnson’s ’empty rhetoric’ about energy investment initiatives.

They attributed the present cost-of-living issue on the Tories’ ‘horrendous legacy’ regarding renewable energy during their 12-year rule.

Environmental activists said that the £700 million invested on Sizewell C could have been used to insulate “vast numbers of draughty houses” throughout the United Kingdom, hence reducing energy expenditures for the next year.

Their Camberwell home is currently on the market for £1.6 million, £400,000 more than they paid for it.

The couple’s projected budget of £3million should be more than enough, considering residences in lush Dulwich Village have sold for an average of £1,820,887 over the last year, as reported by Zoopla.

The couple purchased the four-bedroom Victorian semi-detached home in Camberwell in July 2019 after Mr. Johnson was elected Prime Minister. They made the purchase after being forced to leave their neighboring apartment because neighbors reported heated arguments and phoned the police.

However, the Johnsons have not occupied the residence since relocating to Downing Street. The pair stands to gain almost £400,000 if they get the asking price for their £1.2 million home.

During their tenure in Westminster, they earned thousands of pounds by renting the apartment. According to the register of MPs’ interests, the Prime Minister had an annual rental income of at least £10,000.

A source told The Sun: ‘Carrie and Boris are searching for a place away from the limelight of central London where they can plant roots.

Now that they had Wilfred and Romy, they need a family house with a huge garden. That is precisely what Dulwich can provide.

Colleagues recognize the irony that he aspired to imitate Churchill but ended up following Thatcher’s lead in how he terminated his reign.

Mr. Johnson will fly to Balmoral on his final day as Prime Minister to formally tender his resignation to the Queen, after delivering a farewell address outside No. 10 at 8 a.m. on Tuesday.

The following Tuesday, either Miss Truss or Mr. Sunak would go 1,000 miles round-trip to the Scottish Highlands to be invited to form a government.

The Queen will not come to London next week to pick the next prime minister, it was confirmed today; instead, she will conduct the event in Balmoral, raising additional health worries.

The Queen will not greet a new prime minister at Buckingham Palace for the first time during her 70-year reign. She has appointed all fourteen of her former prime ministers there, but due to recent mobility issues, she will spend her summer vacation in Aberdeenshire.

Mr. Johnson will be flown to Scotland on the smallest of the government’s official aircraft, escorted by top officials.

After officially tendering his resignation to the Queen earlier in the day than the incoming Prime Minister, he will make his own way home from Balmoral, a trip of nine and a half hours by automobile, 45 minutes by private aircraft, or 90 minutes by scheduled British Airways flight from Aberdeen.


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