British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was again criticized for his management of several crises facing the country, after he began a second summer vacation a few weeks before he was due to leave the government.

The Labor Party, the largest opposition faction, accused Johnson, who is scheduled to take power on the sixth of next September, of holding a "big party" at a time when the British are facing many difficulties due to the cost of living crisis.

But Johnson, returning last week to Downing Street from a postponed "honeymoon" vacation with his wife Carrie, which lasted 5 days in Slovenia, decided to spend a second holiday this week in Greece.

A Greek website published scenes showing the prime minister shopping in a shop in a coastal town near Athens, filling his shopping cart with food and wine.

A Labor spokesman said: "It's just one big party for Boris Johnson while the people of the country struggle to pay their bills."

With inflation rising to its highest level in decades amid expectations that the United Kingdom's economy will enter a recession, residents across England are facing difficulties due to the repercussions of a drought that the government officially announced last Friday to hit parts of the country.

Confirming that Johnson is spending this week off, his spokesman said at a press conference that the Prime Minister will always be informed of "any emergency and everything that requires decisions."

The spokesman indicated that Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab could represent Johnson at any meeting, but said, "As far as I know there are currently no meetings on the schedule."

Johnson was forced to announce his resignation on the eighth of last July, following dozens of resignations in his government team, due to scandals affecting him.

And Secretary of State Liz Truss is currently the favorite to win the party leadership from her rival, former Finance Minister Rishi Sunak, in a race whose outcome will be determined by the votes of the party's 200,000 members, and the results will be announced on the fifth of next September.