Boris Johnson to publish full Gray report after
Met inquiry ends
Significant U-turn comes after No 10 previously said
it would only consider publishing more detailed evidence
A No 10 spokesman said: ‘At the end of the process,
the prime minister will ask Sue Gray to update her work in light of what is found.’
Jessica
Elgot Chief political correspondent
@jessicaelgot
Mon 31 Jan
2022 18.06 GMT
Boris
Johnson will publish the full report into lockdown parties in Downing Street
once the Metropolitan police investigation has concluded, in a significant
U-turn after an angry response from Conservative MPs.
No 10 had
promised only to consider publishing fuller evidence once police inquiries have
ended. But a spokesperson said on Monday night that Johnson would ask Sue Gray
to make a further update to her report, after a severely redacted version was
published to avoid prejudicing the Scotland Yard probe.
The No 10
spokesperson said: “Given the police have said they are investigating a number
of events, it would not be appropriate to comment further while the Met’s
investigation is ongoing.
“But, at
the end of the process, the prime minister will ask Sue Gray to update her work
in light of what is found. He will publish that update. However, the prime
minister is clear we must not judge an ongoing investigation and his focus now
is on addressing the general findings.”
The change
came after a number of MPs hinted they would no longer support Johnson unless
he fulfilled his pledge to release the full findings.
Mark
Harper, the former chief whip, said his constituents had questioned the prime
minister’s “fitness for office”, but he had reserved judgement. He said Gray’s
findings should be published “immediately and in full” after the Met
investigation.
Tobias
Ellwood, chair of the Commons defence committee, also tweeted: “If the PM fails
to publish the report in full, then he will no longer have my support.”
Julian
Lewis, chair of the Commons intelligence and security committee, said: “May I
advise him publicly what I have said to emissaries from his campaign team
privately: that it is truly in his interest, in the government’s interest, and
in the national interest that he should insist on receiving the full,
unredacted report immediately, as I believe he can, and that he should then
publish the uncensored version without any further delay?”
Before the
scale of Tory anger became clear, the prime minister’s official spokesman told
journalists Johnson was not committing to further publication. “He will
consider what is appropriate. Obviously, at the start of this, he was the one
that commissioned this report.”
Gray is
understood to have prepared a fuller version of the report for publication
before the Met announced its inquiries on Tuesday last week. In a statement on
Monday, the force said it had received more than 500 pages of evidence and 300
photos linked to apparent parties in Downing Street and Whitehall.
But the Met
said its request to keep “minimal reference” to events being investigated would
apply only for the duration of their investigation.
A statement
from the force said: “As part of the investigation, it is necessary for us to
contact those who attended these events to get their account. As a result, the
Met has requested that any information identified as part of the Cabinet Office
investigation about these events is not disclosed in detail. This request only
applies for the duration of our investigation and does not apply to events we
are not investigating.”
The Met is
not investigating four of the 16 gatherings examined by Gray, but she said she
could not give details of the four parties “without detriment to the overall
balance of the findings”.
Whitehall
sources said Gray needed permission from Johnson to publish a fuller version,
but suggested that in providing an “update” on Monday she was making clear that
it was not the version she hoped would be eventually published.
“This is a
clever tactic,” one source said. “It makes it very difficult to avoid
publishing a fuller version. This is not her first rodeo. I always thought
appointing her would be their biggest mistake.”
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