LONDON — The leader of the governing party announced Tuesday that his administration remains fully focused on the nation's priorities, confirming that the recent loss of 1,500 councillors and the recent resignation of four ministers will not deter him from "getting on with governing."

The declaration comes just days before the King's Speech, during which the government is expected to set out its legislative agenda while actively ignoring its own parliamentary caucus. Officials confirmed the leader is demonstrating his commitment to strong governance by refusing one-to-one meetings with his critics, stating that the public expects him to focus on policy rather than the 80-plus MPs currently in open revolt against his leadership.

"We cannot walk away when things get difficult," said a spokesperson for the leader, who originally secured his position on a platform of unity following the party's worst general election defeat since 1935. "Whether it is being kicked out of power in Wales or achieving our worst-ever Scottish Parliament results, we have a clear mandate to continue delivering our agenda exactly as we have been."

At press time, potential leadership rivals were reportedly finalizing their own unity campaigns to ensure the party's internal power struggles remain its only consistent political output.