PM yet to formally accept law broken despite Met
fines over parties, No 10 says
Boris Johnson’s spokesperson says it is for police to
make judgment after Scotland Yard announces 20 fixed-penalty notices
Jessica
Elgot, Peter Walker and Vikram Dodd
Tue 29 Mar
2022 14.52 BST
Boris
Johnson has not formally accepted that the law was broken, No 10 has said, despite
police saying 20 fixed-penalty notices would be issued for breaches of Covid
rules after allegations of lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street.
Any No 10
civil servants or other staff fined for breaching lockdown rules will not be
obliged to tell their managers, Johnson’s spokesperson said.
While
Downing Street will say if Johnson is himself fined, this will not happen for
anyone else, even the cabinet secretary, Simon Case, it emerged, after Scotland
Yard said it was imposing the first fines over allegations of lockdown-breaking
parties.
The
Metropolitan police said those who received the fines would not be named
publicly, according to the professional practice guidance for fixed-penalty
notices (FPNs).
The force
said on Tuesday there was a “significant amount of investigative material that
remains to be assessed” and that further fines would be issued if the evidence
threshold was met.
The
Guardian reported on Monday night that 20 fines were expected for the most
straightforward cases, with Boris Johnson unlikely to be among them as he has
denied breaking the law.
The
officials and staff who have been issued with FPNs have not yet been informed.
Downing Street has said it does not know the identity of any of the 20.
Johnson’s
spokesperson said there was no obligation for any civil servants or special
advisers who were fined to tell their managers, and that they would not be
asked. Some might need to disclose it for vetting processes, depending on their
security level, he said.
Any action
against staff connected to the parties would come as part of the parallel
report into the claims, led by the senior civil servant Sue Gray, the
spokesperson said, adding: “There are existing HR processes for anyone who
breaks rules in the civil service, and those are well established.”
He declined
to say whether Johnson, who has repeatedly denied any breach of the rules, now
accepted the law was broken on his watch: “It’s for the Met to make that
judgment rather than the prime minister. You will hear more from the prime
minister once the report has concluded.”
Johnson was
not expected to comment on the matter until the end of the police
investigation, and the subsequent publication of the second part of the report
by Sue Gray, the spokesperson said.
The Downing
Street position prompted immediate criticism, with the former chief whip Mark
Harper tweeting that officials and special advisers “are bound by the Civil
Service Code … which says you must *comply with the law*.”
Police are
investigating 12 events in 2020 and 2021, six of which Johnson is said to have
attended. The force said it had obtained more than 300 photographs and 500
pages of documents, stemming from a Whitehall inquiry by Gray.
The Downing
Street gatherings included a summer drinks party where attenders were invited
to “bring your own booze”, leaving dos for civil servants and an alleged
gathering in Johnson’s flat.
The Met
said it would not confirm the number of referrals from each individual event,
saying that may inadvertently lead to people being identified.
Those fined
will receive a letter from the criminal records office, Acro, giving 28 days to
pay the penalty. It is thought at this stage that the Met is probably referring
people for fines of £100 or £200.
One police
source said: “The Met would not put that application [for a fine] into Acro if
they were not certain of their case. This is the low-hanging fruit.”
If the
fines are disputed, the Met will review them. Those identified as facing fines
could in theory produce evidence that shows they did not breach the
regulations.
Labour’s
deputy leader, Angela Rayner, renewed calls for Johnson to resign and said that
should apply as well to the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, who has also been issued
with a police questionnaire about lockdown gatherings.
“The
culture is set from the very top. The buck stops with the prime minister, who
spent months lying to the British public, which is why he has got to go,” she
said. “It is disgraceful that while the rest of the country followed their
rules, Boris Johnson’s government acted like they did not apply to them.”
The Liberal
Democrats said the breaches within Downing Street were enough to compel Johnson
to resign even if he was not personally fined.
The Lib Dem
leader, Ed Davey, said: “If Boris Johnson thinks he can get away with Partygate
by paying expensive lawyers and throwing junior staff to the wolves, he is
wrong. We all know who is responsible. The prime minister must resign, or
Conservative MPs must sack him.”
A number of
Tory MPs have privately said they would move to trigger a vote of no confidence
if Johnson is fined by the Met, although some have withdrawn letters of no
confidence because of the Ukraine crisis.
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