Sue Gray report to be completed by end of May at
earliest, sources say
Senior civil servant expected to be critical of Boris
Johnson when findings about Westminster lockdown parties are published
Aubrey
Allegretti and Rowena Mason
Tue 26 Apr
2022 06.00 BST
Sue Gray
expects to complete her report into Covid law-breaking parties across
Westminster at the end of May at the earliest, the Guardian has been told.
Sources said
that the senior civil servant, who for months has been forced to sit on her
findings about illegal gatherings while Scotland Yard carries out its own
inquiry, believes the police investigation could drag on for several more
weeks.
It may then
take Gray a further fortnight for her to compile her report, meaning that it is
possible the final version will not be delivered to No 10 for at least another
month.
One insider
said they believed Gray was “working towards the end of May as the most likely
timetable” for completing her report.
Another
admitted it was “wishful thinking” that Gray’s report would be published before
the end of next month.
While Gray
was muted in her criticism of specific senior government figures in the
“update” she published in February, she is expected to be far more critical of
specific individuals, including Boris Johnson, in her report.
A separate
source said Gray was likely to be deeply critical of “how particular
individuals ran No 10 and how that contributed to rule-breaking”.
They added
she was likely to offer recommendations about how similar law-breaking,
cultural issues and confused lines of accountability should be prevented or
dealt with.
No 10 has
committed to publishing the full version of Gray’s report.
The Met has
said it will not issue any further updates from its Operation Hillman squad
which is investigating the partygate issues until after the May local
elections.
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Some of
those who attended gatherings in Downing Street have still not received
questionnaires from Scotland Yard quizzing them on their attendance and whether
they had a “reasonable excuse” for breaking the rules.
Of the
eight events under investigation by the Met, fines are said to have been handed
out for four so far: A Cabinet Office leaving drinks in June 2020, the party
held the night before Prince Philip’s funeral in No 10, a “bring your own
booze” gathering in the Downing Street garden and a birthday gathering for
Johnson in the cabinet room in June 2020, for which the prime minister was
among those fined.
Tory MPs
are braced for Johnson to receive a second fine, with some preparing to wait
for that moment until they submit their letter of no confidence in the prime
minister in a bid to trigger a vote on his leadership.
They are
also considering a potential poor Conservative performance at the local
elections as a chance to argue that the ongoing Partygate saga will continue to
cost votes.
In a bid to
build bridges with the newer intake of Conservatives that won seats from Labour
for the first time in 2019, Johnson’s new adviser, David Canzini, addressed the
group known as “the blue barricade” on Monday night.
Canzini was
brought in to improve the political nous of No 10, and has been dubbed the
“mini Lynton”, after the Tory election strategist Lynton Crosby.
Meanwhile,
Liz Truss, the foreign secretary and a possible future Tory leadership
contender, spoke to the One Nation Conservative group – known as the more
moderate wing of the party.
She
discussed the Northern Ireland protocol and ongoing war on Ukraine, but
insiders said it would be a helpful group to have the support of if a contest
is held to replace Johnson.

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