Reference News Network reported on July 28 that while taking on a new role in the cabinet, Boris Johnson also began to take care of a cat named Palmerston in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and his rude personality seems to have affected the cat.
Britain's Daily Telegraph website reported on July 26 that Palmerston's Downing Street ambitions have taken another step forward: it sneaks into May's new residence when no one notices.
The black-and-white cat, from battersea's cat and dog house, was appointed chief mousetrap officer for the Foreign Ministry earlier this year. After infiltrating Ten Downing Street, Palmerston was quickly and rudely evicted by the police.
It then sat at the door of the Prime Minister's residence, looking extremely dissatisfied, even as if confronting a police officer.
After the referendum, the British government fell into turmoil. Palmerston and its rival at Ten Downing Street, Larry, have also been at war lately. It is believed that a fierce clash at the entrance of the Foreign Ministry resulted in Larry injuring one of his paws and being sent to be treated by a veterinarian.
The cat at Ten Downing Street was put in bed for days to recuperate from his wounds.
It is believed that Larry may miss David Cameron and feel pressured to move in with the May family.
Although these skirmishes in the cat world are related to recent personnel changes in Downing Street, Larry has always had a poor relationship with his neighbors.
It was reported that it often fought with Freya, a cat at 11 Downing Street, who was later exiled to the countryside.
Police were forced to fight between Larry and Freya.
According to reports, Larry came to Ten Downing Street in 2011 and the staff of the Prime Minister's Office adopted the cat from the Battersea Cat and Dog House. (Compilation/Feifei Zhao)

Pictured: According to the British "Guardian" reported on July 11, Larry, the "chief mouse catcher of the Cabinet Office" at 10 Downing Street, the British Prime Minister's Office, kept his job and continued to stay in office after Cameron moved out of the Prime Minister's Office on July 13. (Source: The Guardian)