It comes after Prime Minister Lord Gide’s ethics adviser resigned last week, saying he “could not take part in advising on any breaches of the law”. Mr Johnson’s spokesman said there were no plans to replace Lord Gide. Inflation means “sacrifices” may be needed for public sector wages, says last minister – politics MEPs will vote Tuesday on whether the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee (PACAC) can appoint its own independent adviser on ministerial code violations and launch its own inquiry into whether the role remains unfulfilled. Deputy Labor leader Angela Reiner said: “The prime minister has led both of his cautious ethics advisers to resign in just two years, leaving a moral vacuum on Downing Street. “The Labor Party will put No. 10 in special measures to prevent this prime minister from undermining the rules, avoiding accountability and degrading standards in public life. “While this rogue prime minister is backed by power from Conservative MPs, the government is completely incapable of dealing with the cost-of-living crisis facing the British people. “The Labor Party proposal would ensure that a cross-party group of MPs would have the power to intervene and monitor the behavior of this ruthless prime minister until a new, truly independent councilor is confirmed. “This vacancy must not only be filled, but also the role urgently needed to be reformed as the Standards Committee on Public Life has completed. policy. “ Image: Lord Geidt resigned as Mr Johnson’s ethics adviser last week Lord Gide became the second independent adviser to resign under Johnson, saying the prime minister had left him in a “weak and abhorrent position”. Before resigning last week, he admitted that he had considered resigning because of Mr. Johnson’s response to the partygate fine for violating COVID-19 rules. Explaining to the Prime Minister why he was leaving, Lord Geidt said he believed “by a very small margin” that it was possible for him to “continue credibly as an independent adviser” after the partygate. Read more: Complete letters from Lord Geidt and Boris Johnson In his resignation letter, Lord Geidt said he had been asked to comment on “measures that risk a deliberate and deliberate breach of the ministerial code”. “This request has put me in a weak and abhorrent position,” he said. “The idea that a prime minister can, to any degree, engage in deliberate breach of his own code is an insult.”