Johnson refuses to admit lockdown rules were
broken in Downing Street
Dominic Raab says there were ‘clearly breaches’, but
PM says he won’t give ‘running commentary’
Johnson declined to say whether it would be a
resigning matter if he himself received a fixed-penalty notice.
Heather
Stewart and Peter Walker
Wed 30 Mar
2022 19.57 BST
Boris
Johnson has repeatedly declined to admit rules were broken in Downing Street
during lockdown, despite the Metropolitan police issuing 20 fixed-penalty
notices, and Dominic Raab saying there were “clearly breaches of the
regulations”.
Raab, who
as justice secretary oversees the legal system, suggested in a BBC interview on
Wednesday that the Met’s decision to issue 20 penalty notices to people
involved in Downing Street gatherings showed the law had been broken.
But when
the prime minister was later questioned by MPs on the backbench liaison
committee, he repeatedly insisted he would not give a “running commentary”,
adding: “I just think it would be wrong of me to deviate from that.”
Pressed
again by the SNP MP Pete Wishart, Johnson insisted: “I’m going to camp pretty
firmly on my position.”
“There will
come a point when I will be able to talk about the investigation and the
conclusions of the investigation, and that is when the investigation has
concluded,” the prime minister added.
Johnson
also sought to suggest he had tackled some of the problems exposed in the
report by the senior civil servant Sue Gray, by changing the leadership structure
in No 10.
“I have
been several times to the house to talk about this and to explain and to
apologise and to set out the things that we were doing to change the way things
were run in No 10, and we’ve done that,” he said.
Johnson declined
to say whether it would be a resigning matter if he himself received a
fixed-penalty notice.
Downing
Street has said it will announce if the prime minister receives such a notice,
and if the cabinet secretary, Simon Case, does – but will not disclose which
other officials have received them.
Earlier,
the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, argued that Johnson had misled the House of
Commons when he claimed in December, after stories of rule-breaking parties
first appeared, that “all guidance was followed”.
“He
[Johnson] told the house no rules were broken in Downing Street during
lockdown,” Starmer said. “The police have now concluded there was widespread
criminality. The ministerial code says that ministers who knowingly mislead the
house should resign. Why is he still here?”
Johnson
avoided the question, saying: “Of course, the investigators must get on with
their job, but in the meantime, we are going to get on with our job.”
Starmer
replied by castigating Johnson for having repeatedly insisted he knew nothing
about supposed Covid rule-breaking in Downing Street given the Metropolitan
police have announced the fines, with others possibly to follow.
“Look,
there are only two possible explanations: either he’s trashing the ministerial
code or he’s claiming he was repeatedly lied to by his own advisers and didn’t
know what was going on in his own house and his own office,” Starmer said,
asking: “When is he going to stop taking the British public for fools?”
Starmer’s
spokesperson later suggested Johnson’s claim that he could not comment while
the police investigation was continuing, was “clearly untenable”. Labour has
also suggested that Case, the most senior civil servant in No 10, should resign
if he is issued with a fine.
However,
Conservative MPs appear to have accepted for now the argument that it would be
premature to move against the prime minister when it remains unclear whether he
will receive a fixed-penalty notice himself – and before Gray’s full report has
been published.
Several
Tory MPs have previously said publicly they had sent letters to the 1922
Committee chair, Graham Brady, calling for a vote of no confidence in the prime
minister, but some, including the Scottish Tory leader, Douglas Ross, have
since withdrawn them.
If 54 such
letters were received, a vote of no confidence would be called, and if Johnson
lost it, his premiership would be over. Despite the narrowing of the national
polls since the war in Ukraine pushed Partygate down the news agenda, some
backbenchers insist if the prime minister receives a fixed-penalty notice it
should still be a resigning matter.
The Met has
not given any estimate of how long its investigations may take, and it has been
suggested these first 20 notices are the easy cases, or “low-hanging fruit”.
Scores of
Conservative MPs joined Johnson for a dinner on Tuesday evening, aimed at
burnishing his links with the parliamentary party.
Starmer
used the bulk of his questions at prime minister’s questions to tackle Johnson
over the rising tax burden in the wake of last week’s spring statement, asking:
“Does the prime minister still think that he and the chancellor are tax-cutting
Conservatives?”
“Yes, I
certainly do,” Johnson replied, citing the cut in fuel duty in the statement,
and the promise to cut income tax rates by 1p in 2024, saying this would
mitigate the impact of the rise in national insurance to fund the NHS and
social care.
“Cut the
nonsense and treat the British people with a bit of respect,” Starmer
responded, adding, to laughs from Labour MPs: “I can only hope that his police
questionnaire was a bit more convincing than that.”
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