MPs and activists should be asking themselves a big question: what is it that made him popular in the first place?
The battlegrounds of the next election, as well as the wider economy, are being shaped by new technology.
They are chosen not from a factional or ideological standpoint, but from what I see while doing the job of Mayor.
Hitting Londoners with a tax for driving when they have no alternative is unfair. More electric car charging points and improved public transport are needed.
The Conservatives are down to four MEPs: Hannan, McIntyre, Mobarik, and Van Orden.
At one point, City Hall officials told me the only way to get a project done was to hire external lawyers to take City Hall’s procurement lawyers to court.
The then EU Budget Commissioner told me that giving control of this funding to national governments would make it subject to “democratic whim”.
We need a licensing system that sets minimum standards. Regulations must be up to date and even-handed.
These opportunities and options should start far earlier in children’s lives, enabling a twin-track of skills training.
Building new houses on brownfield sites, incentivising working from home, and supporting the expansion of cycle hire schemes should be on our agenda.
This key responsibility isn’t just a question about resources. It’s also about attitude and delivery.
When Johnson was Mayor, challenging performance targets were set – and a credible plan implemented to ensure they were achieved.
In general, it is right that schools should remove children that are a danger to others and who are preventing other children from learning.
We are MPs who supported Remain and Leave respectively, and are looking for a Prime Minister who will be realistic and honest with the EU.