LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's new prime minister, Boris Johnson, will become the new prime minister after his landslide victory in the ruling Conservative Party elections on Tuesday.

Johnson, known for his controversial remarks and positions, was born on June 19, 1964, in New York, and studied journalism at Oxford University after graduating from the prestigious Eton School where he grew up in an aristocratic family.

Former journalist Johnson was elected in 2008 as mayor of London, and in July 2016 he was appointed British Foreign Secretary.

Johnson began his journalism career with The Times, then moved to the Daily Telegraph, where he became an editor-in-chief and editor-in-chief of the right-wing magazine Spectator in 1999.

In contrast to his role as a journalist with his new political post, Johnson merely wrote a column in the Daily Telegraph and wrote many books.

Since his entry into the political arena, Johnson has been known to describe the infamous, most notably a statement ridiculing those who call for boycotting Israel, likening them to "left-wing academics wearing outdated clothes."

Johnson has also likened the EU's goals to that of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler to uniting all European states under one authority.

Johnson, known for his support for Britain's exit from the European Union, said the Nazi leader and Napoleon Bonaparte had failed to unify Europe, describing the idea of ​​the European Union as "an attempt to replicate it in different ways."

Johnson, when she competed for the US presidency against Donald Trump, described Johnson as having a blue iron look, such as the sadistic nurse at the insane hospital.

He also said of Obama that his Kenyan ancestors may have hated the British, and did not apologize for that.

In May 2016, Johnson won the Spectator Prize in "The Poetry of Rajoub Tayyip Erdogan" for a poem of five verses including the Turkish president, wild oats and a goat.

Two months later, Prime Minister Teresa Mae Johnson was named foreign minister, raising concerns about a dispute with Ankara.

"In Britain, Britain's exit from the European Union, like Boris Johnson's poetry, is chaotic, but it is acceptable anyway outside London," said Shazia Mirza, a media and comedian, in a rare show of the bricast.

Johnson, a staunch supporter of Britain's exit from the European Union, insists that his country's withdrawal from the EU should not be postponed after Mai has twice postponed it.

Johnson was in clear disagreement with the outgoing leader of the party on the issue of Britain's exit from the European Union.

In the end, the row between them led to Johnson's resignation last year, but he left no occasion but criticized the policies of May.

"We will leave the European Union on October 31 whether we agree on a deal or not, and the best way to reach a good deal with the EU is to prepare," Johnson said.
For the exit scenario without agreement ".

Johnson has said the nuclear deal with Iran in 2015 seems increasingly "loathsome" and that ways must be found to curb Iran's "destabilizing behavior" and reach out to the Iranians and try to convince them that not developing a nuclear weapons program is the right way forward.

Johnson has so far shown little sign of approaching the toughest approach of US President Donald Trump, but has agreed with the position taken by European states to encourage a return to diplomacy.

At the current stage, he would not support military action.

"I will not claim that the mullahs of Tehran are easy to deal with or are more than a destructive, dangerous and difficult regime," he said during a party leadership debate earlier this month.

"But if you ask me if I think we should now, if you are prime minister at that moment, be pro-military action against Iran?
In 2013, when he was mayor of London, Johnson led a bicycle in the Downtown area in front of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai as part of a visit to the UAE.

Johnson, then, met the riders and officials of Down Down Dubai, and confirmed that his visit came within the framework of friendly relations between the cities of Dubai and London, expressing his happiness with this visit, and to address the future vision between the two cities in different directions.