Boris Johnson attended leaving do during strict
January lockdown
Exclusive: sources say PM dropped in at
prosecco-fuelled farewell in 2021 now being investigated by police
Aubrey
Allegretti, Rowena Mason and Peter Walker
Tue 1 Feb
2022 20.38 GMT
Boris
Johnson attended a prosecco-fuelled leaving do for a No 10 aide during the
strict post-Christmas lockdown, which is now under police investigation, the Guardian
has learned.
Sue Gray’s
investigation into lockdown parties this week revealed several events that had
not previously been publicised, including a gathering on 14 January 2021 “on
the departure of two No 10 private secretaries”. But the redacted report
revealed no further details.
Sources
said the event was held in Downing Street in part as a leaving do for a senior
policy adviser who is now a top civil servant working in the Department for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
Prosecco is
alleged to have been drunk by some staff, with Johnson understood to have given
a speech thanking the official for their work and staying for around five
minutes.
England’s
third national Covid lockdown came into force just over a week earlier, on 6 January,
with a “stay at home” order banning people from leaving their home except for a
handful of reasons including where it was not possible to work from home. The
previous month, the prime minister had effectively cancelled Christmas for
millions of people amid surging Covid cases.
The
revelation places Johnson at another event under investigation by Scotland
Yard. He also attended a “bring your own booze” party on 20 May 2020 and a 56th
birthday celebration on 19 June that year. It is not known whether he was
present at two alleged Downing Street gatherings on 13 November, the day his
aide Dominic Cummings quit, including one in the private flat of Boris and
Carrie Johnson.
Sources
also said another gathering identified by Gray – on 18 June 2020 in the Cabinet
Office – was in honour of a No 10 official who moved to become a senior
diplomat in the US. Hannah Young was Johnson’s lead official on home affairs
policy and moved last year to become deputy consul general at the British
Consulate General in New York.
A
government insider suggested the gathering was at the more serious end of the
spectrum of events investigated by Gray, a senior civil servant. At the time,
gatherings of two people or more indoors were prohibited, with the exception of
those “reasonably necessary … for work purposes”.
A Foreign
Office spokesperson said: “It would not be appropriate to comment while a
Metropolitan police investigation is ongoing.” No 10 declined to comment.
Although
Johnson initially declined to commit to publishing Gray’s full report when
Scotland Yard concludes its inquiry, No 10 backtracked later that day and
confirmed the prime minister would ask Gray “to update her work in light of
what is found” and committed to “publish that update”.
Downing
Street was again forced into a U-turn on Tuesday, having initially refused to
confirm whether it would reveal any fixed penalty notice that is issued to
Johnson by police for breaching Covid rules.
Johnson’s
spokesman acknowledged the “significant public interest” in the matter, and
when asked if they would say if the prime minister was fined, they said:
“Hypothetically, yes.”
Meanwhile,
Cummings claimed on Tuesday that there were “photos of the PM at parties under
investigation”, adding that he had spoken to people who said they had seen
photos of parties in Johnson’s flat.
He claimed
that if police talked to people working in No 10 about the alleged flat party
on 13 November then there would be “witnesses who say ‘we could all hear a
party with Abba playing’”.
Cummings
went on to give a scathing assessment of the prime minister’s capacity for
truthfulness. Writing on his Substack, he said: “People also underestimate the
extent to which he lies to literally everybody literally all day – including to
Carrie and about
Carrie.
“‘Lies’
isn’t even a useful word with him – he lives inside a fog of invention and
‘believes’ whatever he has to in the moment. E.g He both knows he’s lying about
the parties AND thinks he did nothing wrong. This doesn’t make ‘sense’ unless
you’ve watched him carefully or similar sociopaths.”
Government
insiders have not been told how long the police investigation could take but
hope it will only be a matter of weeks given the substantial evidence gathering
already done by a Cabinet Office team of around half a dozen people.
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