‘Mad and totally unethical’: Dominic Cummings
hits out at Boris Johnson
Ex-aide alleges PM tried to quash leak inquiry that
implicated ally and wanted donors to fund work on flat
Peter Walker
and Aubrey Allegretti
Fri 23 Apr
2021 17.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/apr/23/dominic-cummings-launches-attack-on-boris-johnson
Dominic
Cummings has launched an unprecedented and extraordinary attack on Boris
Johnson, alleging that the prime minister tried to quash a leak inquiry as it
implicated an ally, and hatched a “possibly illegal” plan for donors to pay to
renovate his flat.
The
outburst by Cummings, a day after anonymous No 10 sources claimed that he had
leaked private text messages between Johnson and the billionaire James Dyson,
prompted Labour to accuse the government of “fighting each other like rats in a
sack”.
Cummings
used a lengthy post on his personal blog to deny any leaking. Instead, he
accused Johnson and his team of a series of wrongdoings. He said the prime
minister had behaved in a way he considered “mad and totally unethical”, and
warned that he would happily give evidence under oath to an inquiry.
“It is sad
to see the PM and his office fall so far below the standards of competence and
integrity the country deserves,” he wrote.
Such a
damning intervention by the man who was Johnson’s key ally and ideological
inspiration will deeply alarm the prime minister and his aides. Cummings is due
to give evidence to MPs next month.
Cummings,
who left Downing Street in November, dismissed the accusation, in an anonymous
briefing to several newspapers on Thursday, that he had leaked the texts
between Dyson and Johnson.
In the
exchanges last March, the prime minister appeared to promise the businessman
that he would “fix” an issue on the tax status of Dyson staff working in the UK
during the pandemic.
Cummings
said he had checked his phone and had not been forwarded the messages in
question. He claimed he had been told by Downing Street officials that Dyson’s
office had emailed screenshots of his exchanges with Johnson to a series of
officials, including some at the Treasury, and that this was what had been
leaked. He said he had not been copied into this.
“I am happy
to meet with the cabinet secretary and for him to search my phone for Dyson
messages,” he wrote. “If the PM did send them to me, as he is claiming, then he
will be able to show the cabinet secretary on his own phone when they were sent
to me.
“I am also
happy to publish or give to the cabinet secretary the PM/Dyson messages that I
do have, which concerned ventilators, bureaucracy and Covid policy – not tax
issues.”
Cummings
also addressed reports suggesting he had been the serial leaker known as the
“chatty rat”, who had also allegedly leaked news of another Covid lockdown last
autumn.
In perhaps
the most potentially devastating allegation in his blogpost, Cummings claimed
that in a meeting after the leak, the cabinet secretary, Simon Case, told him
and Johnson that “all the evidence” pointed to Henry Newman, then an adviser at
the Cabinet Office, who has since moved to No 10. Newman is known to be close
to Carrie Symonds, Johnson’s fiancee, seen as a key figure in Cummings’ removal
from his job.
Cummings
wrote: “The PM was very upset about this. He said to me afterwards: ‘If Newman
is confirmed as the leaker, then I will have to fire him, and this will cause
me very serious problems with Carrie as they’re best friends … [pause] Perhaps
we could get the cabinet secretary to stop the leak inquiry?’
“I told him
that this was ‘mad’ and totally unethical, that he had ordered the inquiry
himself and authorised the cabinet secretary to use more invasive methods than
are usually applied to leak inquiries because of the seriousness of the leak. I
told him that he could not possibly cancel an inquiry about a leak that
affected millions of people just because it might implicate his girlfriend’s
friends.”
Cummings
did not give any further explanation of what he meant by the “more invasive
methods”, or whether they had been used.
He said he
had warned some officials about Johnson’s plans, and that they would give
evidence under oath to an inquiry, adding: “I also have WhatsApp messages with
very senior officials about this matter which are definitive.”
On Friday
night, No 10 said: “The PM has never interfered in a government leak inquiry.”
Finally,
Cummings said he had warned Johnson about renovations to his Downing Street
flat costing a reported £58,000, for which the prime minister had allegedly
sought outside funding from Conservative supporters.
He wrote:
“I told him I thought his plans to have donors secretly pay for the renovation
were unethical, foolish, possibly illegal and almost certainly broke the rules
on proper disclosure of political donations if conducted in the way he
intended… I refused to help him organise these payments.”
Cummings
said Johnson had stopped speaking to him about the issue in 2020 after he said
this, adding: “I would be happy to tell the cabinet secretary or Electoral
Commission what I know concerning this matter.”
He also
accused the new head of communications at Downing Street, Jack Doyle, of having
given the briefing to newspapers on Thursday.
Earlier,
the government sought to close down the renovations controversy by releasing a
statement saying no outside finance had been involved.
The
statement, released on Friday by a Cabinet Office minister, Nicholas True,
revealed that contractors had been brought in to paint, sand and refresh
floorboards. But Lord True added: “Any costs of wider refurbishment in this
year have been met by the prime minister personally.”
After the
release of Cummings’ blog, No 10 responded: “At all times, the government and
ministers have acted in accordance with the appropriate codes of conduct and
electoral law. Cabinet Office officials have been engaged and informed
throughout and official advice has been followed.
“All
reportable donations are transparently declared and published – either by the
Electoral Commission or the House of Commons registrar, in line with the
requirements set out in electoral law.
“Gifts and
benefits received in a ministerial capacity are, and will continue to be,
declared in transparency returns.”
Cummings
had written the issues needed to be handled by “an urgent parliamentary inquiry
into the government’s conduct over the Covid crisis”.
He
concluded: “Issues concerning Covid and/or the PM’s conduct should not be
handled as No 10 has handled them over the past 24 hours. I will cooperate
fully with any such inquiry and am happy to give evidence under oath.”
Angela
Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, said the government had “spent the last 24
hours lurching between cover-ups and cock-ups”. She added: “The Conservatives
are fighting each other like rats in a sack and slipping deeper and deeper into
the mire of sleaze. It shows breathtaking contempt for the country.”


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