Johnson inquiry report on attack by MPs could
prompt fresh Tory infighting
Findings on ‘sustained attempt’ to undermine
privileges committee expected as early as next week
Peter Walker
@peterwalker99
Tue 20 Jun 2023 19.02 BST
A
privileges committee report that could criticise Conservative MPs who attacked
an inquiry into Boris Johnson may be released as early as next week,
potentially plunging Rishi Sunak into renewed party infighting.
While
Johnson allies say the former prime minister is keen to assist in a period of
“peace and quiet” after Monday’s Commons vote, which endorsed the privileges
committee’s findings that he had lied repeatedly to parliament, the additional
report could jeopardise that.
In the
106-page investigation that found Johnson misled MPs in repeatedly assuring the
Commons he was unaware of lockdown-breaching parties, the Conservative-majority
committee condemned what it called “a sustained attempt, seemingly coordinated”
to undermine its members and the inquiry process.
It said it
would produce a supplementary “special report” into this, which could be
published next week.
While it is
not known what the extra report will say, even if it does not name MPs it could
anger Johnson’s supporters, jeopardising Sunak’s attempts to placate them.
Some of
Johnson’s Tory allies have argued that whether or not they agree with the
decision about misleading parliament, the committee’s decision to suspend him
for 90 days – not enforceable as he has stepped down – and the special report
show overreach.
Downing
Street has steadfastly refused to give Sunak’s opinion on Monday’s vote, or
even whether he believed Johnson did mislead MPs, after the prime minister was
absent from the entire debate.
While the
deliberate ambiguity avoids the risk of further upsetting Johnson-loyal
Conservative MPs, it prompted Labour and the Liberal Democrats to label Sunak
as terrified of his own party and is likely to be exploited by Keir Starmer at
Wednesday’s prime minister’s questions.
A series of
ministers were among the 354 MPs who approved the report on Monday, 118 of them
Conservatives. Seven MPs voted against.
Asked
whether Sunak had a view on the decision, his spokesperson said: “The prime
minister thanks the committee for their thorough work, and he fully respects
the decision of the house on this matter. He’s made clear it was rightly a
matter for parliament and not the government.”
Questioned
repeatedly, the spokesperson declined to say if Sunak agreed with the
committee’s conclusion that Johnson had misled MPs.
“He
respects the decision the house has come to,” he said. “This follows extensive
work by the committee, but beyond that, I don’t have any more to add.” He also
declined to comment on how Sunak may have voted had he attended, saying: “I
wouldn’t get into how he may have voted if he was there. Obviously, that is the
definition of a hypothetical.”
Asked if
Sunak’s stance showed a lack of backbone, the spokesperson replied: “It was
right to enable a free vote to ensure the house could come to a collective
view, and he respects that view.”
No 10 also
refused to endorse comments by Penny Mordaunt, the Commons leader, who opened
Monday’s debate by saying Johnson had presided over a “debasement of the
honours system” with his resignation honours list.
Asked if
Mordaunt was speaking for the government, Sunak’s spokesperson said: “You’ve
got our position on the former prime ministers’ honours system. I’m not aware
of when the leader of the house made those comments, but I’m not aware of any
plans to change our approach.”
Mordaunt
voted to endorse the report, as did ministers including Gillian Keegan, the
education secretary, and Alex Chalk, the justice secretary.
Angela
Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, said: “It’s astonishing that a prime minister
who promised integrity, professionalism and accountability still doesn’t have
an opinion about his disgraced predecessor being found guilty of repeatedly
lying to parliament. Instead of turning the page on Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak
is showing just how weak and indecisive he is.”
Christine
Jardine, the Liberal Democrats’ Cabinet Office spokesperson, said: “Rishi Sunak
is in complete denial over the Boris Johnson saga. The British public will
rightly judge him for skipping the vote and not even offering an opinion.”
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