Resignation or calculated move?
Having spent the past 22 years in front-line politics, including three years at No 10 following stints as foreign secretary and as London mayor, politics courses through Johnson's veins, to the extent that his 1020-word resignation statement reads more likely a calculated attack designed to undermine Rishi Sunak, who played a key role in his downfall before himself becoming prime minister, than an acceptance that his political career is over.
Read more: Boris fell, but is not finished
While Johnson will now stand down as the MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip after 15 years, he clearly sees his resignation more as a tactical ploy than an admission of defeat.
And he lays the blame for his decision squarely at the door of the Privileges Committee, which he has described as being "prejudiced" and a "kangaroo court", one that was intent on driving him into the political wilderness.
Indeed, Johnson appears to have convinced himself that he has been targeted for the prominent role he played in persuading the British public to vote for Brexit back in 2016.
"I am not alone in thinking that there is a witch hunt underway, to take revenge for Brexit and ultimately to reverse the 2016 referendum result," he claimed.
Going on the offense
But rather than allowing himself to be a victim of any "witch hunt", Johnson has clearly opted to go on the offensive against his tormentors, not least Sunak.
Nearly a year after his removal from Downing Street, Johnson made a point of comparing his own record to that of his successor, suggesting that the current prime minister stands no chance of holding on to the massive 80-seat parliamentary majority that Johnson won in the last general election in 2019.
Johnson is also highly critical of Sunak's handling of the economy, arguing that he had failed to support a "pro-growth and pro-investment agenda".
"We need to cut business and personal taxes – and not just as pre-election gimmicks – rather than endlessly putting them up." Sunak's failure to secure a trade deal with the US was another example of his failure to build on Johnson's Brexit legacy.
"Why have we so passively abandoned the prospect of a Free Trade Deal with the US?" Johnson demanded.
For the moment, with the next British general election at least a year away, Johnson will most likely bide his time before deciding on his options for a political comeback.
In the year since he left Downing Street Johnson has already established himself on the global speaking circuit, earning more than £4.2 million from commitments spanning Nigeria, New York and Singapore.
He is also working on a memoir on his time in Downing Street which, when published, is bound to include a number of bombshell revelations.
So while Johnson prepares to take his leave of the parliamentary stage, all the indications are that the most talked-about figure in British politics is already laying the groundwork for his triumphant return.