‘Nobody is above the law’: Theresa May wades into
Downing Street parties row
Former prime minister breaks silence to express her
anger and expectation of full accountability
Matthew
Weaver
Fri 28 Jan
2022 13.53 GMT
Theresa May
has made her first intervention in the row over Downing Street parties, saying
she was angry to hear about them.
The former
prime minister, who has frequently criticised Boris Johnson on other issues,
has been conspicuously silent in the weeks since the “partygate” allegations
first emerged at the end of November.
Now,
however, she has said that if evidence were to emerge of deliberate wrongdoing
then “full accountability” should follow and that “nobody is above the law”.
In a letter
to her local newspaper, the Maidenhead Advertiser, she wrote: “It is vital that
those who set the rules, follow the rules … This is important for ensuring the
necessary degree of trust between the public and government.
“Like so
many, I was angry to hear stories of those in No 10, who are responsible for
setting the coronavirus rules, not properly following the rules. All those
working at the heart of government should conduct themselves with the highest
of standards which befits the work they do, and this applies as much to those
working in No 10 as to other parts of government.”
The letter
was sent before the Metropolitan police launched an inquiry into alleged
parties after receiving evidence from Sue Gray, the senior official who has
been asked by Downing Street to investigate possible Covid rule-breaking in
Whitehall.
May said
that “if there is evidence of deliberate or premeditated wrongdoing, I expect
full accountability to follow”.
News of
May’s intervention came as it emerged that key parts of Gray’s report into the
parties could be pared back at the request of the police. Scotland Yard
revealed it had asked for references to matters it was now investigating to be
removed.
Johnson’s
resignation from May’s cabinet was seen as one of the blows to her authority
that led to her leaving No 10 in 2019.
She has
since been a vocal critic of her successor, making a number of sharp interventions
in the Commons and the media. She accused him last year of abandoning Britain’s
“position of global moral leadership” by threatening to break international law
during Brexit trade negotiations.
She also
attacked the government’s decision to cut foreign aid, saying it had “turned
its back on some of the poorest in the world”, and she dismissed government
assurances on post-Brexit security arrangements as “utter rubbish”.
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