Sue Gray report facing further delay after Met
police intervention
Force says it has asked for report to make minimal
reference to Downing Street events it is investigating
Ben Quinn
and Aubrey Allegretti
Fri 28 Jan
2022 14.39 GMT
The
publication of the Sue Gray report could be delayed significantly after
Scotland Yard revealed it had asked for references to matters it is now
investigating to be removed.
Key parts
of the long-awaited report on allegations of parties in No 10 that may have
broken Covid rules could be pared back after the move..
The
Metropolitan police announced on Tuesday that they were launching their own
investigation, prompting wrangling with the Cabinet Office about what needed to
be censored in the findings handed to No 10 to avoid prejudicing officers’
inquiries.
Scotland
Yard initially denied holding up Gray’s report, but in a statement on Friday it
said that for events it was looking into “we asked for minimal reference to be
made in the Cabinet Office report”.
The Met
said it “did not ask for any limitations on other events in the report, or for
the report to be delayed, but we have had ongoing contact with the Cabinet
Office, including on the content of the report, to avoid any prejudice to our
investigation”.
The
admission led the Liberal Democrats to warn it would be “profoundly damaging”
for there to be a hint of an “establishment stitch-up” between the Met
commissioner, Cressida Dick, and the government.
Keir
Starmer, the Labour leader, accused the government of being distracted by a
“charade of Johnson’s making”, and “paralysed” by attempts to “save his skin”.
He said people concerned about tax rises and rising energy bills were “getting
no answers from a government mired in sleaze and scandal”, but it was
“offensive” that ministers’ “sole focus is on cleaning up after themselves”.
Starmer
called for Gray’s report to be published “in full, as soon as possible” and
urged the Met to “get on with their investigation”, adding the prime minister
was “unfit for office”.
Johnson’s
spokesperson said the Met “should be given time and space” to complete its “independent
work”.
No 10 has
committed to publishing the findings it receives from Gray. But if what is
presented is heavily redacted, Johnson’s spokesperson refused to confirm the
full version would be released at a later date, when Scotland Yard’s inquiries
are over.
Alistair
Carmichael, the Liberal Democrats’ home affairs spokesperson, said: “Police
officers need the trust and confidence of the public to do their jobs and keep
our communities safe. That’s why we called for the police to investigate No 10
weeks ago and put this whole sorry business behind us, instead of waiting for
Sue Gray.
“The Sue
Gray report must be published in full, including all photos, text messages and
other evidence. If it is redacted now, a full, unredacted version must be
published as soon as the police investigation is complete.”
The former
prime minister Theresa May broke her silence on “partygate” to say she was
angry at the allegations of Covid rule-breaking and warn that if there was
evidence of deliberate wrongdoing then “full accountability” should follow.
In a letter
to her local newspaper, the Maidenhead Advertiser, May said “nobody is above
the law” and stressed: “It is vital that those who set the rules, follow the
rules … This is important for ensuring the necessary degree of trust between
the public and government.”
Tory MPs
vented their fury with the Met, with one saying the move would “undermine
public confidence in police”. Another said it was a “broken organisation”,
commenting: “If No 10 could run a conspiracy like this, we wouldn’t be in this
mess.”
Asked on
Friday morning why the Gray report had been delayed, the technology minister,
Chris Philp, told LBC: “You will have to ask Sue Gray that, because the timing
of the report is up to her.
“You will
have seen, as I have seen, press speculation it is because she’s discussing
with lawyers and police exactly what can and can’t go in it. But the bottom
line is I don’t know, because it is a report she’s compiling independently and
I have no visibility of what may or may not be in it, or what her thought
process is.”
Asked what
he could offer in terms of a defence of the prime minister, Philp said he would
not speculate on what had happened in No 10.
“Like
everybody else, I’m just going to wait until it is published,” he said. “I’ll
read it very carefully when it comes out and I’m not going to speculate … about
what the report may or may not contain and what that may or may not mean. Let’s
just wait until it comes out. Hopefully it will be soon because I think all of
us want to be able to draw a line under this.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário