Today marks the first day of the Platinum Jubilee celebrations and the weather has held up, in London at least, where the sun is cracking the flags this morning. Best wishes to everyone who is celebrating the Queen's 70 year year milestone. And to everyone still working – hope you get there soon.
As you might expect, most of the news websites and front pages focus their coverage on the celebrations and the monarch's message, in which she thanks the public for its goodwill towards her as the two day bank holiday kicks off.
The short holiday will provide some respite for Boris Johnson, but questions about his premiership are still dominating the political agenda domestically. After the number of MPs publicly declaring that they no longer have confidence in the Johnson grew and an awkward interview the PM gave to Mumsnet in which he was accused of being a habitual liar was published, Johnson ultra-loyalists have begun to hit out at the rebels calling for his head.
The Times carries a report quoting allies of the PM describing the plotters as "self-indulgent, narcissistic and contemptuous" amid growing concern in Downing Street that a vote could take place as early next week, although the paper said the whips' office believes it could take longer.
Priti Patel, meanwhile, joined cabinet colleagues Nadine Dorries, the culture secretary, and Dominic Raab, the justice secretary and deputy PM, in rowing in behind the Big Dog. In an interview with the Daily Mail, the home secretary tells her colleagues pushing for a confidence vote to "forget it", adding the party should be focused on "real challenges that we have to find solutions to".
That cabinet ministers are out giving interviews to the papers and defending Johnson is perhaps indicative of growing concern inside No 10 that a leadership ballot is in fact imminent, despite the protestations yesterday by Raab, who claimed the idea is nothing but "Westminster froth".
Only time will tell whether or not he is right and any relief the PM gets this weekend is likely to be short lived as MPs begin preparing to head back to Westminster following the half-term recess.
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Keep a civil tongue.