More Tory MPs call for PM to go as No 10 tries to
limit Partygate report fallout
Boris Johnson’s allies rally to his defence as one
former minister says he ‘will not defend the indefensible’
Peter
Walker, Jessica Elgot and Aubrey Allegretti
Thu 26 May
2022 19.41 BST
Four more
Conservative MPs called for Boris Johnson to resign on Thursday over
lockdown-breaking parties, as Downing Street sought to contain the political
aftermath of the Sue Gray report.
The prime
minister’s allies reiterated the defence that his attendance at a series of
gatherings for departing staff was permitted as work duties. His official
spokesman argued that Covid guidelines did not specifically rule out leaving
drinks.
He also
formally apologised for misleading the media in repeatedly denying that any
parties had taken place inside Downing Street during lockdown. He insisted this
had been entirely inadvertent.
Nineteen
Tory MPs have publicly called for Johnson to quit so far, well below the 54
required to prompt a confidence vote, but the trickle of new voices will
unnerve Downing Street as backbenchers digest Gray’s description of rowdy and
drunken gatherings inside No 10.
Along with
those who have made public calls, two more have submitted and then withdrawn
letters of no confidence, and at least three others have called for Johnson to
resign but said they would not submit letters.
The former
health minister Stephen Hammond was among those to say he had submitted a
letter of no confidence. Hammond, who has a majority of 628 in his Wimbledon
seat, described the conclusions of the Gray report as damning. “I cannot and
will not defend the indefensible,” he said.
“I am
struck by a number of my colleagues who were really concerned that it’s almost
impossible for the PM to say I want to move on, as we cannot move on without
regaining public trust and I am not sure that’s possible in the current
situation.”
Two other
MPs, David Simmonds and John Baron, said they had lost confidence in Johnson. A
fourth, Angela Richardson, who quit as a parliamentary private secretary
earlier in the year, said she would have resigned if she had been in Johnson’s
position.
Baron, a
former shadow minister, said he did not believe Johnson was unaware of the
“shameful pattern of misbehaviour during the pandemic as the rest of us kept to
the Covid regulations”.
Simmonds,
the MP for Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner, which adjoins the prime minister’s
Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency in west London, said it had become clear
that “while the government and our policies enjoy the confidence of the public,
the prime minister does not”.
Speaking
about Gray’s findings, Richardson said: “I am clear that had this been a report
about my leadership, I would resign.”
Julian Sturdy,
the MP for York Outer, had called on Johnson to go on Wednesday. The report had
left him “unable to give the prime minister the benefit of the doubt,” he said.
MPs said on
Thursday that they expected the number of letters to increase to continue over the
next few days, but stressed it was not a coordinated effort.
Others have
hinted at deep dissatisfaction in emails to constituents seen by the Guardian.
Andrew Jones, the MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, wrote that he was “in no
way sympathetic to fancy words or formulae that allow anyone to pretend they
were at a work event when they clearly were not”. Rob Largan, the MP for High
Peak, said he was “taking the appropriate action to defend integrity in public
life.”
Philip
Dunne, the MP for Ludlow, wrote to a constituent that he had grave doubts about
the PM. “I am sorry to say any benefit of the doubt the PM enjoyed has now been
eroded,” he wrote. “While I have not called for his resignation, the PM has yet
to prove to me that he is the right person to ensure the return of integrity
and due decorum, that all our constituents expect from politicians.”
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When
Johnson’s spokesman, a civil servant who by convention is not named when
quoted, apologised for misleading the media, he refused to say whether he had
attended any of the events set out in Gray’s report or whether he had received
a fixed-penalty notice.
“The prime
minister has said, and I’ve said on a number of occasions that there were
failings both in terms of what happened and in terms of how it was handled
subsequently,” he said. “The prime minister has apologised for that, and I’m
happy to apologise for that as well.”
He said
Johnson had been entitled to attend a series of leaving drinks, including one
where he has pictured, glass in hand, raising a toast, as the “guidelines were
silent” on whether such events were permitted.
Steve
Barclay, the minister brought n as Downing Street chief of staff as part of the
Partygate shake-up at No 10, argued the prime minister saw such events as
permissible because staff were working “closely together for long hours”.
The
publication of Gray’s report has reignited scrutiny of the parallel
Metropolitan police investigation into the gatherings in and around No 10, and
notably the question of why Johnson was fined for only one other event – his
own birthday party in June 2020 – when he had attended other gatherings for
which staff were penalised.
The Met’s
acting commissioner vehemently rejected the notion that Johnson had received
favourable treatment, saying the force had investigated the parties “without
fear or favour”.
Giving
evidence to the London assembly’s police and crime committee on Thursday,
Stephen House said fixed-penalty notices were only issued if police “had the
evidence that we thought would give us a realistic prospect of a convention at
court” should the fine be challenged.
“Without
making comment on any individual, I don’t believe there is clear evidence that
the prime minister breached many other times,” he said.
“I am very
confident of the integrity of the decisions that were made in this
investigation. I’m not particularly concerned about what the prime minister
thinks. I do my job without fear or favour, as did the Met.”
House said
he accepted some photographs of No 10 gatherings “look bad”, but added: “We
deal with the law, not what looks bad. And just because there is alcohol
present, can I remind people that the Covid regulations are about breaching
Covid regulations. They are not about whether there is drink there or not.”
He also
rejected the idea that Johnson or other senior No 10 staff might have avoided
sanction by not filling in police questionnaires about their activities. He
said someone doing so would be “a spur for more work, not less”, and that the
“vast, vast majority” of questionnaires were returned.
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