What's new

Boris Johnson and Partygate saga

Should Boris Johnson resign as UK Prime Minister?

  • No, he should not

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    12
The first fines have been issued to people in government for breaking COVID rules at the height of lockdown.

Officials are understood to have received fines thought to be in connection with an event in the Cabinet Office on 18 June.

The fines, worth £50, have been sent to individuals by email. The names of those involved have not been disclosed.

Sky
 
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak will be fined by the police for breaking lockdown laws.

The PM's wife, Carrie Johnson, will also be given a fixed penalty notice.

Officials confirmed the three had received notification of the fines from the Met, following an investigation into illegal parties in Downing Street during Covid lockdowns.

Spokespeople for the Johnsons and Mr Sunak said they had not been told which event the fines were linked to.

However, the three were reported to be at the same gathering for the PM's birthday in June 2020.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Mr Johnson and Mr Sunak must resign.

And the Covid 19 Bereaved Families for Justice group said there was "simply no way either the prime minister or chancellor can continue".

The Met is investigating alleged Covid law-breaking at 12 gatherings in Whitehall and Downing Street.

So far, more than 50 fines have been handed out.

A spokeswoman for the Covid Bereaved Families, Lobby Akinnola, said it was "unbelievably painful" to know such senior members of government attended parties while they were unable to be with their dying loved ones.

He added: "The fact that the prime minister and his chancellor then lied about it, and would have continued to do so if the police hadn't intervened, is truly shameless.

"They broke the law. But even worse, they took us all for mugs."

Labour's Sir Keir said the fines for the PM and chancellor showed the Conservatives were "totally unfit to govern", adding: "Britain deserves better.

"Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak have broken the law and repeatedly lied to the British public. They must both resign."

The Green Party echoed the call, with co-leader Adrian Ramsay saying the fines were "a damning indictment of the reckless culture of a Conservative Party and prime minister that consider themselves untouchable".

And Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey called for Parliament - which is currently on its Easter recess - to be recalled to hold a no confidence vote in the prime minister.

Allegations
Reports of parties being held in Downing Street during Covid lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 first emerged in December last year.

Mr Johnson initially insisted that "guidelines were followed at all times".

But as more and more gatherings were revealed, he faced further questions about his involvement.

The PM later apologised for attending a drinks party in the Downing Street garden, but told Parliament he believed he had been attending a work event.

Mr Sunak was also asked in the Commons December if he attended Christmas parties said to have taken place in 2020.

He replied: "No, I did not attend any parties."

Mr Johnson ordered an inquiry into the allegations of rule-breaking, led by senior civil servant Sue Gray.

The Met initially said it would not investigate the allegations but changed its mind when Ms Gray passed information to officers.

Ms Gray released an interim report, stating there had been a "failure of leadership" in Downing Street.

But her full report will not be released until the Met have concluded their inquiries.

BBC
 
Boris Johnson has apologised after being fined by the Met Police for breaking lockdown rules but said he would not resign.

The prime minister said: "I have paid the fine and I once again offer a full apology."

Asked if he would quit over the fine, Mr Johnson said: "I want to be able to get on and deliver the mandate that I have, but also to tackle the problems that the country must face right now."

Pressed on whether the fact he had broken his own laws meant that was not possible, he responded: "I believe that it's my job to get on and deliver for the people of this country and that is what I'm going to do."

Discussing how he had been fined for attending his own birthday party in the Cabinet Room in Downing Street in June 2020, the prime minister said "in all frankness at that time it did not occur to me that this might have been a breach of the rules".

But he said after being issued a fine he "now humbly accepts" he did breach COVID-19 laws.

He said he "spoke in completely good faith" when he repeatedly said all guidelines were followed in Downing Street.

Asked if he thought more fines were coming his way, he said the media would be among the first to know.

Mr Johnson, his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were notified they would be issued with fines for breaking lockdown rules.

Both Mr and Mrs Johnson are understood to have paid £50 each, a reduced rate as the fixed penalty notices were settled within 14 days.

The fixed penalty notices are the result of a Metropolitan Police investigation into parties in Downing Street and Whitehall in 2020 and 2021.

Mr Johnson has become the first sitting prime minister to receive a punishment for breaking the law.

Opposition calls for PM to quit

Labour have called for both the prime minister and chancellor to resign.

Scotland's first minister Nicola Sturgeon has also urged them to quit. Her Welsh counterpart Mark Drakeford said the prime minister must go.

Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the SNP called for parliament to be recalled from recess.

Earlier the Met Police disclosed it had now referred more than 50 cases for fixed penalties as a result of the investigation, named Operation Hillman.

PM fined for attending own birthday party

Number 10 confirmed the prime minister was fined for going to his birthday party in the Cabinet Room in Downing Street in June 2020.

Mrs Johnson's spokesperson said she had paid a fixed penalty notice relating to the gathering and "apologises unreservedly".

Sky News understands Mr Sunak only answered a police questionnaire in relation to the birthday party.

Northern Ireland minister Conor Burns previously claimed Mr Johnson was "ambushed by a cake" at the event, where up to 30 people are said to have gathered and sung Happy Birthday.

Most Britons think PM should resign, poll shows

A YouGov poll has revealed 57% of people think Mr Johnson should resign as prime minister after being fined for attending the party, while 30% said he should stay.

The same proportion of the 2,464 adults polled said Mr Sunak should also resign as chancellor for being at the same event.

Some 75% of responders said they thought Mr Johnson knowingly lied to parliament about whether he broke lockdown rules, with 12% saying he did not.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said: "This is the first time in the history of our country that a prime minister has been found to be in breach of the law, and then he lied repeatedly to the public about it. Britain deserves better, they have to go."

The Liberal Democrats and Plaid Cymru also called for parliament to be recalled, while Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon also demanded the prime minister quit.

Cabinet begins mounting defence

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson's Cabinet began mounting its defence shortly after Mr Johnson spoke, with Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries arguing the Tory leader had "been clear about what happened" during the gathering and had "offered a full apology".

"It was a brief gathering in the Cabinet Room, less than 10 minutes during a busy working day," she said.

"PM is at his best when delivering on the priorities of the British people which he will continue to do."

Treasury minister Simon Clarke also offered his "full support" to both the prime minister and chancellor.

SKY
 
<b>Minister Lord David Wolfson quits over Covid law-breaking at No 10</b>

A Conservative peer has quit as a justice minister over Covid-law breaking in Downing Street.

It comes after Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were fined for attending a lockdown-breaking party in No 10.

In a letter to Mr Johnson, Lord David Wolfson criticised the "official response" to "repeated rule-breaking".

He is the first person to quit the government since reports of lockdown parties emerged.

Barrister Lord Wolfson has been a justice minister since December 2020, with responsibility for human rights and the constitution.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61097076
 
<b>PM vows to set record straight over claims he misled MPs over parties</b>

Boris Johnson has promised to "set the record straight" over what he has told MPs about lockdown parties in Downing Street.

The prime minister initially told them no rules had been broken - but he is now among more than 50 people who have been fined by police.

This has led opposition parties to accuse him of misleading Parliament.

Under government rules, ministers are expected to resign if they knowingly mislead MPs.

The ministerial rulebook also says they should correct the record at the "earliest opportunity" if they inadvertently tell MPs something incorrect.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told reporters on Thursday that Mr Johnson was a "lawbreaker and a liar" who has "no honesty and no integrity".

Mr Johnson, along with his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak, was fined on Tuesday for attending a birthday party for him in June 2020.

Mr Johnson has since said it "did not occur" to him at the time of the gathering that it could be in contravention of Covid lockdown rules.

He is known to have attended at least two further events of the 12 being investigated by police, meaning he could be fined again.

One No 10 aide, who witnessed many of the events under investigation, told the BBC the June 2020 birthday party was the least serious gathering, in terms of potential rule-breaking, that the PM attended.

Alongside staff leaving parties on 18 June 2020 and 16 April 2021, the birthday event is among three events so far known to have attracted fines.

MPs are currently on their Easter recess but are due to return next week.

Asked whether he would put the record straight, Mr Johnson replied: "You're going to have to wait until I come to Parliament.

"Of course, I will set the record straight in any way I can."

On Thursday, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey told reporters the PM had "clearly misled" MPs and should be "sanctioned by Parliament".

"Liberal Democrats will be supportive of the Speaker in whatever approach he thinks is best to ensure Parliament can hold this law-breaking, dishonest prime minister to account," he added.

It comes amid reports opposition parties could push next week to have the privileges committee investigate whether Mr Johnson misled MPs, a process which could end in him being suspended from the Commons.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61105335
 
Shameful bloke. If he had any self respect he would resign, the first PM in UK history to be fined for breaking the law while holding the office of PM.

What it does prove is the pandemic was over blown. If it was so serious these clowns wouldnt be so relaxed, they have all the info inc classified intel.
 
Shameful bloke. If he had any self respect he would resign, the first PM in UK history to be fined for breaking the law while holding the office of PM.

What it does prove is the pandemic was over blown. If it was so serious these clowns wouldnt be so relaxed, they have all the info inc classified intel.

Correct on both counts.
 
The issue isn't Boris, I mean we all know someone who broke Covid rules.

The issue is the Parliamentary system. It is not against the law to lie in Parliament, however an MP cannot accuse another MP of lying in Parliament, if they do then MPs must apologise, if not, they are ejected from the house.

Boris is playing the system.

Don't hate the player, hate the game.
 
A cabinet minister has likened Boris Johnson's lockdown fixed penalty to a parking fine - ahead of the prime minister facing MPs for the first time since the punishment was issued.

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis also told Sky News' Kay Burley that Mr Johnson had not misled parliament when he initially declared that no rules had been broken - arguing that he was saying what he believed to be true at the time.

Police have been investigating 12 events in Downing Street and Whitehall during 2020 and 2021 when lockdown rules were alleged to have been broken and so far more than 50 fines have been announced.

Police have been investigating events in 2020 and 2021

Police have been investigating events in Downing Street and Whitehall in 2020 and 2021
Last week it was revealed that Mr Johnson had been fined over a gathering on his birthday in June 2020, with his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak also receiving a punishment.

Downing Street is understood to be braced for more fines for the PM and reports over the weekend painted him as the instigator of leaving drinks for a staff member in November 2020 - another of the events being investigated.

Mr Lewis, pressed on whether a law maker can ever be a law breaker, told Sky News: "We do see consistently - whether it's through parking fines, whether it's through speeding fines, ministers of both parties over the years have been in that position.

"We've had prime ministers in the past have penalty notices from what I can see... I saw that there was a parking notice that Tony Blair had once.

"Ministers in the past have, sadly, been subject to getting fixed penalty notices on a range of issues.

"They can continue to be ministers, they do continue to be ministers - we've seen that in both governments - the previous Labour government as well as the current Conservative government.

Emily Thornberry says Boris Johnson's excuses for partygate are 'incredible'
Image:
Shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry called for Tory MPs to "look at their consciences"
"The focus has to be on accepting when you've done something wrong, acknowledging what you've done - which the prime minister has - and being focused on moving forward to do things in the right way."

Asked whether Mr Johnson accepts that he broke the rules, Mr Lewis replied: "In the sense that he has paid a fine that the police have decided to issue because the rules were broken.

"But that doesn't mean that anything he said to Parliament was inaccurate at the time. What he said to Parliament he believed to be true at the time."

Tory MPs should 'look at their consciences'

Mr Lewis also appeared to indicate, when asked, that the PM would make it public if he receives any more fines.

"The prime minister's always been very clear that he'll be very open about any fines that he receives," he said.

Shadow attorney general Emily Thornberry told Sky News: "The truth is that the prime minister knew that he had been involved in parties, that parties were happening at Number 10 - it's his home, it's his office.

"They were happening at such a scale it is simply incredible for the prime minister to say that he just didn't know."

Ms Thornberry said Labour was in discussion with other opposition parties "about what the most appropriate thing to do is next" after the PM's Commons appearance later.

But she acknowledged that Conservative MPs would be needed to win any vote against the PM - and urged them to "look at their consciences".

"They need to say 'enough is enough, this prime minister needs to go'."

'An erosion of trust'

Senior Tory backbencher Tobias Ellwood - who has previously said the PM should now "step back" - said the partygate affair should not be "trivialised" by being compared with parking fines.

"This is actually about a culture of ill discipline, a lack of leadership and focus during a time of national crisis that we were going through because of COVID," he told Sky News.

"The consequence of all that is an erosion of trust with the British people and actually damaging the party brand."

Mr Ellwood urged Mr Johnson himself to call a vote of no confidence but appeared to rebuff the idea of cooperating with opposition parties, instead arguing that the matter should be kept "in house" in the party

https://news.sky.com/story/partygat...g-penalty-as-pm-prepares-to-face-mps-12593503
 
Boris Johnson will face a Commons vote on whether claims that he misled MPs over partygate should be investigated.

Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle granted a request from opposition MPs for a vote which will be held on Thursday - and which Sky News understands will seek to refer Mr Johnson for investigation by the privileges committee.

Sky
 
Boris Johnson says he knows people expected better of their PM

This is the first time Boris Johnson has faced parliament since he was fined for breaking coronavirus lockdown rules.

He starts by saying he has just left a virtual meeting with world leaders on the situation in Ukraine.

"I begin in all humility by saying that on 12 April I received an FPN relating to an event in Downing Street on 19 June 2020," he says.

"I paid the fine immediately and offered the British people a full apology.

"I repeat my wholehearted apology to the House."

He says he knows many are angry that they "expect better from their prime minister".

The PM sticks to his previous comments, by saying he did not know when he arrived at the event it would be a birthday party, and instead expected a meeting on the government's COVID response.

"That was my mistake and I apologise for it unreservedly," he says.

He adds that he respects the outcome of the police's investigation and will "always take the appropriate steps", before quickly turning to the situation in Ukraine.

Opposition MPs are likely to want to steer the conversation back to partygate as soon as they can.

SKY
 
Starmer: 'What a joke'

Sir Keir Starmer is responding to Boris Johnson's statement to MPs following his fixed penalty notice for breaking lockdown rules in 2020.

He begins by declaring the prime minister's statement a "joke".

The Labour leader says: "Even now, as the latest... apology stumbles out of one side of his mouth a new set of deflections and distortions pour from the other.

"But the damage is already done, the public have made up their mind. They don't believe a word the prime minister says. They know what he is."

He goes on to detail the fallout of the partygate scandal, including "the Chancellor [Rishi Sunak's] career up in flames".

"For all those unfamiliar with this prime minister's career, this isn't some fixable glitch in the system, it's the whole point. It's what he does, it's who he is."

He then describes the PM as "incapable of changing" and "dishonest": "So he drags everybody else down with him."

Sir Lindsay Hoyle is forced to call order as the chamber erupts in chatter, then insisting "dishonest" is not an appropriate word.

In response, Sir Keir says: "The prime minister knows what he is."

Continuing his statement, Sir Keir says that some Tory MPs seem "oblivious to the prime minister's game", while "some know what he is up to, but are too weak to act".

Sir Keir goes on to tell the story of a family who were unable to be at the bedside of a dying woman who "would have given the world" to hold her hand, even if it was "just for nine minutes".

However, they didn't because "they followed the prime minister's rules".

He describes Mr Johnson's statement as "half-hearted", adding that if the PM has "any respect" for those who made sacrifices to follow the rules "he would resign".

SKY
 
PM apologises to bereaved Labour MP

Labour MP Afzal Khan tells the PM his apology will "ring hollow to those of us who have lost loved ones".

The Manchester MP's mother, father-in-law and mother-in-law died of coronavirus.

The PM responds by saying: "I know the honourable gentleman has experienced bereavement during the pandemic and I repeat my apologies."

Tory MP Michael Fabricant adds that his best friend's mother died in hospital and he wasn't able to say goodbye to her.

But he makes a different point and argues that "the PM's mother also died during that COVID crisis".

"We've all suffered from these heart-wrenching tragedies," he says, in support of Mr Johnson.

SKY
 
Boris Johnson has said he intends to fight the next general election as Conservative Party leader as he faces persistent pressure over his leadership due to the ongoing partygate row.

Speaking to reporters on the plane as he embarks on a two-day trip to India, the prime minister said that he does not intend to offer his resignation over the Metropolitan Police investigation into lockdown-busting events that occurred in Downing Street and across Whitehall, or put himself forward for a confidence vote.

It comes as the government is calling for a vote on a parliamentary investigation into whether Mr Johnson misled Parliament over partygate to be delayed until the police inquiry has concluded and the Sue Gray report has been published.

MPs were due to take part in a crunch vote on Thursday as to whether they believe the Privileges Committee should be asked to consider whether the PM's conduct amounts to contempt of Parliament, following a motion tabled by leading figures from seven opposition parties including Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer.

But on Wednesday evening, the government tabled an amendment to the Labour-led motion stating that the vote on the investigation itself should not take place until after the police investigation has concluded and the Sue Gray report has been published.

This will allow MPs "to have all the facts at their disposal" when they make a decision, it said.

It is understood that all Tory MPs will be whipped to support the amendment, which could postpone a vote on Mr Johnson's conduct for months.

There is likely to be a heated debate on the matter tomorrow in the Commons, as the government's amendment could mean a vote is held on Thursday to say the 'real' vote on the PM's conduct should be held later - after both the Met Police investigation and Sue Gray's report are finalised.

Meanwhile, away from Westminster and on his way to India, the PM was asked by reporters whether there are any circumstances under which he would resign.

"Not a lot springs to mind at the moment, but if you wanted to sketch some out I'm sure you could entertain viewers with some imaginary circumstances, I don't propose to go into them. I can't think of them right now," he said.

Probed on whether he may put himself forward for a confidence vote just to end the matter, the PM replied: "The best thing to do for the people, for Parliament, is to get on and focus on the things we were elected to do."

Pressed further, he continued: "I think politics has taught me one thing which is that you're better off talking and focussing on the things that matter and the things that make a real difference to the electorate, and not about politicians themselves."

Mr Johnson also suggested that partygate is not at the forefront of voters minds, telling reporters: "You're better off talking about things other than politicians themselves."

Put to him that he may be missing a big day in Westminster tomorrow while in India, the PM added: "I'm focused on jobs, growth and a fantastic partnership with India."

The prime minister - alongside his wife Carrie Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak - has already received one fixed-penalty notice for attending his birthday party in the Cabinet Room in June 2020, but he is also thought to have been at other gatherings under investigation by Scotland Yard.

Making a statement in the Commons on Tuesday, Mr Johnson repeatedly apologised to MPs but insisted he had not believed the gathering to mark his 56th birthday had violated his own government's COVID regulations which were in place at the time.


Prior to the government tabling an amendment to their motion, opposition leaders including Sir Keir had urged Conservatives MPs not to block the investigation into Mr Johnson's conduct.

The original opposition motion stated that the PM misled the House on at least four occasions:

• On 1 December 2021, Mr Johnson told MPs "that all guidance was followed in Number 10"

• On 8 December 2021, the prime minister told the Commons: "I have been repeatedly assured since these allegations emerged that there was no party and that no COVID rules were broken"

• Also on 8 December 2021, he said: "I am sickened myself and furious about that, but I repeat what I have said to him: I have been repeatedly assured that the rules were not broken"

• Finally on the same date: "The guidance was followed and the rules were followed at all times"

The PM's visit comes at a time when Prime Minister Modi's government is refusing to criticise Russia
Ministers who deliberately mislead the House are expected to quit

The Privileges Committee - which would carry out any possible investigation - has powers to investigate whether Mr Johnson misled Parliament which include the ability to compel the release of reports, documents and photos linked to partygate.

It is unclear what penalties the PM could face if the committee were to find that he did mislead the House, however the ministerial code explicitly states that ministers who deliberately mislead the House are expected to quit.

The PM himself will not take part in any possible Commons vote tomorrow on his conduct as he will be in India for talks with Prime Minister Modi on economic, security and defence collaboration.

The PM's visit comes at a time when Prime Minister Modi's government is refusing to criticise Russia, an ally of India since the Cold War.

India relies heavily on Moscow for arms imports and has abstained in a series of votes in the United Nations over the invasion.

Mr Johnson said he would raise concerns that India is becoming increasingly reliant on Moscow's fuel.

"I will make the argument that everybody needs to move away from dependence on Putin's hydrocarbons," Mr Johnson said.

He also vowed to bring up human rights concerns with Mr Modi, who is accused of damaging India's democracy and of whipping up anti-Muslim sentiment.

https://news.sky.com/story/downing-...ry-leader-amid-ongoing-partygate-row-12594651
 
Boris Johnson will shortly return to England with his premiership under increasing strain amid the ongoing partygate scandal.

The prime minister has been on a two-day official visit to India this week where he met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and vowed to deepen trade ties with the country.

But now, heading back to Westminster, he faces the harsh reality of an impending parliamentary investigation into his conduct, more partygate fines being issued by the Metropolitan Police and an increasing number of his own backbench Conservative MPs calling for him to resign.

Despite further rumblings of discontent within his own party over lockdown-busting parties that took place across Downing Street and Whitehall, the PM was adamant on Friday that he will still be prime minister in six months' time.

The PM has faced repeated questions about his future as the scandal continues to dog him despite his attempts to move on to broader issues during his trip to India.

On Friday, Robert Largan became the latest of more than a dozen Tory MPs to speak out against Mr Johnson, telling constituents in a newsletter that he "will not defend the indefensible".

Earlier this week, former minister Steve Baker, an influential Conservative MP, said the prime minister "should be long gone".

Meanwhile, fellow Conservative MP and Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee chairman William Wragg confirmed he had submitted a letter of no confidence in Mr Johnson's leadership.

"I cannot reconcile myself to the prime minister's continued leadership of our country and the Conservative Party," he told MPs in a scathing Commons speech.

Another backbencher, Tobias Ellwood - who has already called on Mr Johnson to go, said there had been a "silence of support" and urged Conservatives to "take matters into their own hands".

Lord Barwell, former chief of staff to Theresa May - Mr Johnson's predecessor in Downing Street - told Sky News that it all showed the mood among Tory MPs "isn't quite as supportive of the PM as maybe some people were having us believe two or three days ago".

This was reaffirmed by MPs agreeing that the PM should face a parliamentary investigation into whether he misled MPs when he denied lockdown rules were broken across Downing Street and Whitehall.

A Labour-led motion calling for the Privileges Committee to investigate Mr Johnson's conduct was nodded through without a vote on Thursday.

The investigation will not fully begin until the conclusion of the Metropolitan Police's inquiry into 12 events and the Privileges Committee will determine whether the PM is in contempt of parliament for misleading MPs with his repeated denials of parties in Downing Street.

It was understood on Friday that at least one Number 10 official had received a fixed penalty notice from the Met Police for attending a lockdown-busting "bring your own booze" event held in the Downing Street garden.

It is not known who has been fined for the gathering which was held at the height of the UK's first national lockdown on 20 May 2020, but - as of yesterday afternoon - it was not thought the prime minister was among those fined.

Mr Johnson has previously admitted attending the garden drinks, but has repeatedly stressed he believed it was a "work event".

The prime minister apologised to MPs in January for being among those at the Downing Street drinks party, saying he spent 25 minutes thanking staff, before returning to his office.

Met Police issuing more fines

According to a leaked email, one of the prime minister's then-chief aides, his Principal Private Secretary Martin Reynolds, sent an email to over 100 employees in Number 10, including the prime minister's advisors, speechwriters and door staff, inviting them to the event.

The Met Police has confirmed it will not issue any further partygate updates before the May local elections.

But Number 10 has pledged to confirm if the prime minister or cabinet secretary receive any fines before individuals head to the polls next month.

Until now, it was known that more than 50 fines had been issued in relation to the lockdown-breaking parties in Westminster.

Next week, the PM will likely be probed further as pressure from his own backbench MPs continues to mount and he keeps batting away questions on whether he can survive the scandal.

Defiant in Delhi this week, Mr Johnson is determined to carry on in his role - but the question now is will members of his Conservative Party let him.

SKY
 
Partygate: PM has not received any further fines - No 10

Boris Johnson has not received any further fines for breaking lockdown rules, Downing Street has said.

The confirmation comes after sources told ITV News fines had been issued for a drinks party in the Downing Street garden attended by the PM in May 2020.

Mr Johnson has previously apologised for attending the "bring your own booze" event, saying he "believed implicitly" it was a work event.

Strict Covid rules were in place when the event was held on 20 May 2020.

People could not leave their homes - or be outside the place they lived - without a reasonable excuse, which included work where you couldn't work from home.

On the same day, the government Twitter account reminded people of the existing guidance that gatherings must be limited to two people outside.

The BBC has not been able to confirm whether fixed penalty notices have been issued over the event.

Meanwhile, Mr Johnson arrived back in the UK after a two-day trip to India, during which he played down the partygate row, saying voters wanted the government to "focus on the issues on which we were elected".

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-61201166
 
<b>Local elections 2022: PM cost us votes, claim defeated Tory leaders</b>

Several Conservative council leaders have blamed Boris Johnson after they suffered heavy local election defeats.

John Mallinson, who lost in the new Cumberland Council, said voters did not feel the PM could be "relied upon to tell the truth".

Wandsworth leader Ravi Govindia said "national issues" had caused the loss of the flagship council.

But Conservative party chairman Oliver Dowden said it was not time to change leader.

Mr Johnson said he took responsibility for the results, adding it was clear voters wanted his government to focus on issues that mattered to them.

"This government is absolutely determined to keep going with every ounce of compassion and ingenuity that we have, get people through the economic aftershocks," he said.

But council leaders in formerly Tory-dominated areas cited the scandal surrounding alleged parties in Downing Street during Covid restrictions as impacting votes.

They said the furore damaged public opinion about the prime minister and concern about the cost of living had overshadowed local issues.

Mr Mallinson, leader of Carlisle City Council, which is being replaced by Cumberland, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that Mr Johnson "bears a lot of the responsibility" for the "very poor" results in local elections.

If things remain the same at the next general election, "I think we'll pay for it," he added, describing Mr Johnson as a "poor option" to lead the Tories into the next general election.

He said voters in local elections were preoccupied with national issues such the cost of living and distracted by controversies like the so-called "Partygate" scandal.

But Mr Mallinson added: "I think it is not just Partygate, there is the integrity issue. Basically I just don't feel people any longer have the confidence that the prime minister can be relied upon to tell the truth."

Labour won 30 of the 46 seats in Cumberland, which brings together Conservative-run Copeland and Allerdale as well as Carlisle.

In the former Conservative flagship of Wandsworth in London, Labour gained eight councillors to bring their total to 35 - winning control.

Outgoing leader Mr Govindia did not blame Mr Johnson directly, but said: "Let's not be coy about it, of course national issues were part of the dilemma people were facing."

In Portsmouth, which remains with no party in overall control but where Conservatives lost four seats, Tory leader Simon Bosher said Mr Johnson should "take a good, strong look in the mirror".

He said of the losing candidates: "Those are people that are actually bearing the brunt on the doorstep of behaviour of what's been going on in Westminster".

Mr Dowden, who as Conservative chairman is in charge of election campaigning, acknowledged the party had suffered some "difficult results" but said it was not time for a change at the top.

"Labour are certainly not on the path to power and I believe that Boris Johnson does have the leadership skills, in particular the energy and the dynamism that we need during this difficult period of time," he said.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61351124
 
The nation deliberately engineered and gerrymandered to ensure a pro-unionist, Protestant majority has voted for a nationalist party Sinn Fein.

Beautiful !
 
The nation deliberately engineered and gerrymandered to ensure a pro-unionist, Protestant majority has voted for a nationalist party Sinn Fein.

Beautiful !

The DUP are dying as a political force it seems. British unionism in Northern Ireland incidentally is not dying at the same rate, but since they had Arlene Foster publicly tarred and feathered & cut ties with all other UK political parties over the border Protocol then the DUP have become an internally combusting embarrassment. Some unionist constituents now will either be abstaining or (unthinkably) voting for Sinn Fein.
 
The nation deliberately engineered and gerrymandered to ensure a pro-unionist, Protestant majority has voted for a nationalist party Sinn Fein.

Beautiful !

A party that thought that a hard brexit would get rid of the GFA and whose leaders think that the world is only 5000 years old were bound to have a major downfall
 
The Conservatives have suffered significant losses at Thursday's local elections, losing almost 500 seats and control of 11 councils.

The party shed support to the Liberal Democrats in southern England, and lost key London councils to Labour.

The Tories also saw losses in Scotland, where the SNP won the most seats, and in Wales to a resurgent Labour. The PM said it had been "tough" in some areas.

Sinn Féin is on track to win the most seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly.

The party won the most first-preference votes, and has the largest number of candidates returned so far, with 18 of the 47 seats declared. More results are to follow on Saturday.

The results come after votes to elect 200 councils in England, Wales and Scotland, and the devolved Stormont assembly in Northern Ireland.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson argued the results had been mixed overall.

Labour gains were more modest outside London, with limited breakthroughs for the party in its traditional heartlands in northern England.

With nearly all results in, Labour has gained 139 seats, with leader Sir Keir Starmer saying his party was "on track" to win the next general election.

But his day was overshadowed by news that police are investigating whether he breached Covid rules at an event in Durham last year.

The BBC projects Labour would take 35% of votes and the Tories 30%, had all parts of Britain gone to the polls.

The projection gave Labour its biggest local election lead in a decade, and could lead to renewed criticism of Mr Johnson within his own party.

The findings - based on the results declared so far from areas which voted on Thursday - put the Liberal Democrats on 19% and other parties on 16%.

In the BBC's collection of key wards, the Conservative vote is down on average by seven points since 2018 in the south of England, compared to four points in both London and the Midlands and just two points in the North.

BBC
 
Tory MPs are assessing the fall-out after a "tough night" for Boris Johnson in his first test at the ballot box since being fined for breaking lockdown rules.

The Conservatives lost nearly 500 seats in England, Wales, and Scotland in Thursday's council elections, with partygate and the cost of living crisis cited by local leaders as key issues on the doorstep.

Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi brushed off the losses as he told Sky News it was all part of dealing with a midterm vote and insisted Boris Johnson was still an electoral asset.

"If you look at the way that Boris cuts through in places like Nuneaton, places like Newcastle-under-Lyme, other parts of the country as well - Harrow in London," he said.

In a message to Tory colleagues, he added: "People don't like to vote for split parties, for teams that are divided.

"We are strongest when we are united, we've got a Queen's Speech next week where we will demonstrate to the nation that the second half of this parliament is all about dealing with repairing the economy, recovering from COVID, the backlog of the NHS and national security - here at home, safer streets - and, of course, abroad.

"All of these things we have a plan for. We are stronger when we are united and that would be my message to all my colleagues."

Sky News analysis suggests if the result was replicated at a general election, the Conservatives would lose their Commons majority.

Labour took control in former Tory strongholds such as the London boroughs of Westminster and Wandsworth, as well as snapping up Southampton and Worthing on the south coast.

But their success was not replicated in parts of the Midlands and the North, where they need to recover seats taken by the Tories in Mr Johnson's landslide 2019 general election victory.

Labour's electoral success was also tarnished after Durham police announced that they would investigate whether leader Sir Keir Starmer broke COVID rules while drinking with colleagues in April 2021.

Sir Keir has said there was no party and that he was "confident no rules were broken" during the episode, which has been dubbed "beergate".

Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats enjoyed success in councils across the country from Somerset to Hull.

In Wales, the Conservatives lost ground to Labour and the Lib Dems; while the SNP enjoyed yet another triumph in Scotland with Labour pushing the Tories into third place.

Mr Johnson said: "We've had a tough night in some parts of the country, but on the other hand, in other parts of the country, you're still seeing Conservatives going forward and making quite remarkable gains."

Positives for his party included taking control of the London borough of Harrow and consolidating its grip in Nuneaton - an area that will be a key general election battleground.

But one southern Tory MP told Sky News that the situation was "pretty grim".

"The PM is to blame, no one else, and there are now 19 Tory London MPs who will be baying for blood.

"The PM is killing our traditional vote."

Separately, David Simmonds, Conservative MP for Ruislip, Northwood and Pinner, said the issue of lockdown rule-breaking in Downing Street had kept coming up on the doorstep.

"He (Mr Johnson) needs to find a way to restore confidence in the government and I think there's a number of ways he might do that," he said.

"A change of leader would be one of them. Alternatively he needs to demonstrate what the alternative plan would be."

But Mr Johnson's allies warned it was not time to change leader as they insisted Labour's gains fell short of what was needed for the party to secure a general election victory.

SKY
 
At least 50 more fines have been issued as a result of the police investigation into lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street and Whitehall during coronavirus restrictions.

But Number 10 has confirmed Prime Minister Boris Johnson is not one of those who have received a new fixed penalty notice (FPN).

In the latest update on its investigation, the Metropolitan Police said as of Thursday it has made more than 100 referrals for FPNs to the ACRO Criminal Records Office for breaches of COVID-19 regulations.

Three tranches of fines had been issued previously, with 20 announced in the first wave at the end of March and more than 30 in April, meaning there are at least 50 FPNs in the latest wave.

The identities of those who receive fines are not revealed by police, as is normal practice with the issuing of fixed penalty notices.

However, Downing Street has made clear they would make it public if further fines are received by the prime minister, the chancellor or the cabinet secretary.

When the second set of fixed penalty notices was revealed in April, it was quickly confirmed that the PM, his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were among those penalised for breaking the government's own COVID laws in a scandal that has been dubbed "partygate".

Read more: All you need to know about the Met Police's partygate investigation

All three were hit with the £50 penalty for their attendance at a birthday party for the PM in the Cabinet Room in Downing Street on 19 June 2020.

They have all since paid the fine.

It meant Mr Johnson became the first sitting prime minister to receive a punishment for breaking the law.

Responding to the news that the Met Police has now issued 100 fines over partygate, Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey said: "Boris Johnson stood up in parliament and said COVID rules were followed in Number 10 at all times.

"Now 100 fines have been issued by the police over partygate. It shows the shocking scale of the law-breaking in Johnson's Downing Street and the extent of his lies."

But the culture secretary and the education secretary said they still have faith in Mr Johnson despite the number of COVID fines in Whitehall and Downing Street passing 100.

Nadine Dorries and Nadhim Zahawi were asked the question before a cabinet meeting at a pottery in Staffordshire. The culture secretary said "we do" and Mr Zahawi said "absolutely".

Meanwhile, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and his deputy Angela Rayner are currently under investigation by Durham Police over whether an event with party activists in April last year broke COVID rules.

The inquiry was launched after footage emerged of him drinking a beer with colleagues in April 2021 when restrictions were in place.

Both have said they will resign if they are fined by the force.

Sir Keir has accused Conservative MPs of "mudslinging" over the issue.

Labour has rejected that there is any equivalence with the Downing Street partygate scandal, which has rocked the government and is confident the party can prove Sir Keir did not break lockdown rules.

The developments in April renewed calls from opposition parties for the PM to resign - with the chancellor also facing pressure to quit - but Mr Johnson's position appeared to be safe in the short term.

Although Lord Wolfson quit as justice minister, Mr Johnson's cabinet has given its backing to the PM.

Some Tory MPs have said the PM should go now, but Mr Johnson's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine seems to have shored up his position and caused some of his backbenchers to rethink their demands for his departure from Number 10.

Further fines for the PM could change this, however.

Mr Johnson has offered a "full apology" for breaking his own COVID rules, but has said he will not be resigning.

Despite further rumblings of discontent within his own party over lockdown-busting parties that took place across Downing Street and Whitehall, the PM was adamant last month that he will still be prime minister in six months' time.

In April, Conservative MP Robert Largan became the latest of more than a dozen of the PM's own backbenchers to call for him to resign.


Mr Largan told constituents in a newsletter that he "will not defend the indefensible".

Earlier in the same week, former minister Steve Baker, an influential Conservative MP, said the prime minister "should be long gone".

Meanwhile, fellow Conservative MP and Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee chairman, William Wragg, confirmed he had submitted a letter of no confidence in Mr Johnson's leadership.

The Metropolitan Police's investigation into lockdown-breaching parties held across Downing Street and Whitehall is still ongoing.

https://news.sky.com/story/partygat...-investigation-of-covid-law-breaches-12590633
 
At least 50 more fines have been issued as a result of the police investigation into lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street and Whitehall during coronavirus restrictions.

But Number 10 has confirmed Prime Minister Boris Johnson is not one of those who have received a new fixed penalty notice (FPN).

In the latest update on its investigation, the Metropolitan Police said as of Thursday it has made more than 100 referrals for FPNs to the ACRO Criminal Records Office for breaches of COVID-19 regulations.

Three tranches of fines had been issued previously, with 20 announced in the first wave at the end of March and more than 30 in April, meaning there are at least 50 FPNs in the latest wave.

The identities of those who receive fines are not revealed by police, as is normal practice with the issuing of fixed penalty notices.

However, Downing Street has made clear they would make it public if further fines are received by the prime minister, the chancellor or the cabinet secretary.

Pressed on whether it was his understanding that the PM and Mr Case were not in the latest tranche of people fined, the PM's official spokesperson told reporters: "That's correct, yeah."

Speaking after a regional cabinet meeting in Staffordshire on Thursday, the PM was asked if he or his wife Carrie Johnson had been issued with a second fixed-penalty notice.

"No, but as soon as we have more to say on that, as I've said many times before, you will be among the very first to know," he replied.

When the second set of fixed penalty notices was revealed in April, it was quickly confirmed that the PM, his wife and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were among those penalised for breaking the government's own COVID laws in a scandal that has been dubbed "partygate".

All three were hit with the £50 penalty for their attendance at a birthday party for the PM in the Cabinet Room in Downing Street on 19 June 2020.

They have all since paid the fine.

It meant Mr Johnson became the first sitting prime minister to receive a punishment for breaking the law.

Responding to the news that the Met Police has now issued 100 fines over partygate, deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner said: "Boris Johnson's Downing Street has now reached a century of fixed penalty notices for their partying.

"They have racked up the dubious distinction of receiving more fines on the prime minister's watch than any other location. Boris Johnson made the rules, and then broke them at record-breaking scale. Britain deserves better."

Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey added: "Boris Johnson stood up in parliament and said COVID rules were followed in Number 10 at all times.

"Now 100 fines have been issued by the police over partygate. It shows the shocking scale of the law-breaking in Johnson's Downing Street and the extent of his lies."

But the culture secretary and the education secretary said they still have faith in Mr Johnson despite the number of COVID fines in Whitehall and Downing Street passing 100.

Nadine Dorries and Nadhim Zahawi were asked the question before a cabinet meeting at a pottery in Staffordshire. The culture secretary said "we do" and Mr Zahawi said "absolutely".

Meanwhile, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and his deputy Angela Rayner are currently under investigation by Durham Police over whether an event with party activists in April last year broke COVID rules.

The inquiry was launched after footage emerged of him drinking a beer with colleagues in April 2021 when restrictions were in place.

Both have said they will resign if they are fined by the force.

Sir Keir has accused Conservative MPs of "mudslinging" over the issue.

Labour has rejected that there is any equivalence with the Downing Street partygate scandal, which has rocked the government and is confident the party can prove Sir Keir did not break lockdown rules.

The developments in April renewed calls from opposition parties for the PM to resign - with the chancellor also facing pressure to quit - but Mr Johnson's position appeared to be safe in the short term.

Although Lord Wolfson quit as justice minister, Mr Johnson's cabinet has given its backing to the PM.

Some Tory MPs have said the PM should go now, but Mr Johnson's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine seems to have shored up his position and caused some of his backbenchers to rethink their demands for his departure from Number 10.

Further fines for the PM could change this, however.

Mr Johnson has offered a "full apology" for breaking his own COVID rules, but has said he will not be resigning.

Despite further rumblings of discontent within his own party over lockdown-busting parties that took place across Downing Street and Whitehall, the PM was adamant last month that he will still be prime minister in six months' time.

In April, Conservative MP Robert Largan became the latest of more than a dozen of the PM's own backbenchers to call for him to resign.

SKY
 
London police said on Thursday they had completed their probe into the "Partygate" scandal rocking Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government and issued a total 126 fines in all.

The Metropolitan Police said in a statement that of the fines issued for breaching Covid restrictions, 73 were to women and 53 to men but that some people received more than one fixed penalty notice.

Police were called in to investigate gatherings at Downing Street and across government departments on eight dates between May 2020 and April 2021.

Last week, the force said it had issued more than 100 fines. The exact amount of the penalties has not been confirmed, but the fines can range from £30 to £10,000 (35-11,800 euros, $37-12,400) for the most serious breaches.

Those fined so far include Johnson, his wife Carrie and finance minister Rishi Sunak.

The government said they were fined for a gathering in Downing Street marking the prime minister's birthday in June 2020.

Johnson has said he would reveal if he receives further fines.

Britain's domestic Press Association news agency said it understands the prime minister has not yet received notification of another fixed penalty notice.

The probe was launched on January 25 and saw 12 detectives sift through 345 documents, including emails, door logs, diary entries and witness statements, 510 photographs and security camera footage and 204 questionnaires, the Met said.

"When Covid regulations were introduced, the Met was clear that whilst we would not routinely investigate breaches of regulations retrospectively, there may be occasions when it would be appropriate to do so," said the Met's Acting Deputy Commissioner Helen Ball.

"The information that we received with regard to the alleged breaches in Downing Street and Whitehall was sufficient to reach our criteria to begin such an investigation.

"Our investigation was thorough and impartial and was completed as quickly as we could, given the amount of information that needed to be reviewed," she said.

"This investigation is now complete."

Johnson has apologised for the breach of Covid regulations, but refused demands to resign after becoming the first UK leader to be found to have broken the law while in office.

Johnson also faces an investigation by a parliamentary committee into his past denials to the House of Commons of lockdown lawbreaking.

The parties have fuelled widespread public anger against the ruling Conservatives, who suffered a drubbing in recent local elections.

The main opposition Labour party's leader, Keir Starmer, has promised to step down if police in northeast England fine him for his own alleged breach of coronavirus laws during a campaign meeting.

The gathering took place in Durham in April last year, with a video later emerging of Starmer drinking beer and eating a takeaway meal inside an office with party colleagues.

AFP
 
126 fines, and most of them women. Hmmmm.

Big deal. World, moves on, and BJ dodges another bullet.
 
He ain't going to quit. He knows crim pays in this world.

Legend has it that Boris Johnson has a Nawaz Sharif poster in his bedroom.
 
He ain't going to quit. He knows crim pays in this world.

Legend has it that Boris Johnson has a Nawaz Sharif poster in his bedroom.

Why just a poster when he can see the real thing in the flesh just a few city blocks away?
 
Labour has called on Boris Johnson to "urgently explain" why he met Sue Gray to discuss her long-awaited report into lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street.

The pair discussed where Ms Gray believed the Metropolitan Police were with the inquiry, and Whitehall's understanding of where the police were on interviews, Sky News understands.

The revelation of an undisclosed meeting is likely to trigger surprise given the forthcoming report has repeatedly been described as independent.

Further details of the meeting are sketchy, with confusion over whether the inclusion of pictures in the report was discussed and who initiated the meeting.

The prime minister is saying he wants to disclose the maximum available information now to get the issue out of the way so would not have pressured her to drop the report, it is claimed.

The pair would not have discussed the judgements that senior civil servant Ms Gray was preparing to come to in the report, multiple sources say.

Chef Jamie Oliver takes part in the What An Eton Mess demonstration outside Downing Street, London, calling for Prime Minister Boris Johnson to reconsider his U-turn on the Government's anti-obesity strategy. Picture date: Friday May 20, 2022.

A Number 10 spokesperson said: "The prime minister commissioned the investigation led by Sue Gray and has been clear throughout that it should be completely independent.

"As he reiterated again today, the decision on what and when to publish rests entirely with the investigation team and he will respond in Parliament once it concludes."

Earlier, a Downing Street spokesman said he would "not get into specifics" when put to him that Ms Gray's team had been in contact with the prime minister about the forthcoming report.

Asked whether Downing Street was negotiating over who is named in Ms Gray's report, the spokesman added: "Sue Gray is compiling the report independently and how she does that, and the contents of it, and what is presented is entirely a matter for her."

However, all sides are likely to argue the meeting was above board given Mr Johnson commissioned the report.

Earlier in the process there were robust procedures to ensure Number 10 did not know about the contents of the interim report.

The meeting is understood to have taken place on a date before the Commons voted to refer Mr Johnson to the privileges committee which happened on 21 April.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner called on the prime minister to "urgently explain" why the "secret meeting" had taken place.

She said public confidence in the process had already been "depleted", and people "deserve to know the truth".

"This is a Prime Minister incapable of taking responsibility for the rotten culture he has created in Downing Street or of doing the decent thing," she added.

"The Sue Gray report must be published in full and with all accompanying evidence."

'People and public will be surprised and concerned about the outcome'

On Thursday, the Metropolitan Police confirmed they had ended their investigation into lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street and Whitehall, and had given out 126 fines for 83 people.

The £460,000 investigation into the partygate scandal, which has lasted nearly four months, has already resulted in fines for the PM, his wife Carrie Johnson, and Chancellor Rishi Sunak over a birthday gathering for the prime minister.

Helen Ball, acting deputy commissioner of the Met Police, said: "A number of people, members of the public, have been both surprised and concerned at what they have heard. And I'm sure they will be surprised and concerned about the outcome of our investigation."

After the end of the inquiry, Downing Street said the prime minister had been told that there would be no further action against him.

The PM's official spokesman said: "He's pleased the investigation's concluded but at no point has it distracted him from the important issues facing the country."

Sky News understands that Carrie Johnson has also been told there will be no further action against her.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, who has called for Mr Johnson to quit over his fine, said the investigation had shown "industrial scale law breaking in Downing Street... that reflects a culture and the prime minister sets the culture".

The investigation saw the Metropolitan Police make referrals for fixed penalty notices (FPNs) - which have been or will be issued - in relation to events on eight dates from May 2020 to April 2021.

Police said a team of 12 detectives had trawled through 345 documents including emails, door logs, diary entries and witness statements, 510 photographs and CCTV images, and 204 questionnaires in what they described as a "careful and thorough" investigation.

Detectives have not publicly disclosed the identities of those fined. It is known that among them is former government ethics chief Helen MacNamara, who apologised for an "error of judgement".

The Met said that 28 people had received between two and five penalty notices.

The conclusion of the police investigation clears the way for Ms Gray's report into the parties to be published in full.

A source close to her team said the aim was to publish it as soon as possible, with next week likely.

Sky News understands discussions about whether or not to name senior civil servants who have been awarded fines are ongoing.

Downing Street said Mr Johnson will "talk in more detail" about the scandal after the report is published.

Mr Johnson also faces a parliamentary investigation into whether he misled the House of Commons about the parties.

SKY
 
The long-awaited Sue Gray partygate report is finally set to be published this week - with the deadline for Downing Street officials to object to being named in it passed.

Reports have suggested the document, expected to be published in the coming days, will feature photographs of illegal gatherings.

It was also reported that top civil servant Simon Case will be particularly hard-hit by the contents, despite the fact he was never fined over the scandal.

Meanwhile, calls for Prime Minister Boris Johnson to explain the purpose of a "secret" meeting with Ms Gray are refusing to let up.

Cabinet ministers failed to shed light on the circumstances of the controversial meeting, details of which first emerged on Friday, as Labour said people "deserve to know the truth".

Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi insisted during an interview with Sky's Sophy Ridge on Sunday that he did not know who called the meeting, or what was discussed, while maintaining Ms Gray had "complete control" over what would be published in the document.

International Trade Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan also said she did not know who had organised the talks, adding: "I don't follow anybody's diaries."

It is understood Mr Johnson and Ms Gray met at least once for an update on the report's progress while it was being drafted, but a Whitehall source said its contents were not discussed at any point.

The exact nature of the talks remains unclear.

Such meetings would not have been viewed as unusual, the source said, with the aim to take stock of what stage the report was at.

A No 10 source insisted the request for the meeting did not come from Mr Johnson.

It has been reported the idea was in fact suggested by a No 10 official, while the calendar invitation was sent by Ms Gray.

Angela Rayner, Labour's deputy leader, called on the prime minister to "urgently explain" why the "secret meeting" with Ms Gray took place.

Downing Street insisted Mr Johnson had been "clear throughout" that the report should be "completely independent".

What is the Sue Gray report and what can we expect from the full findings?

The Gray report follows the conclusion of a separate inquiry by the Metropolitan Police into COVID rule-breaking events at the heart of government, which saw a total of 83 people receive at least one fixed-penalty notice (FPN) each, for attending get-togethers over eight separate days.

The PM received just one fine, for his 56th birthday gathering in June 2020 when indoor mixing was banned, along with his wife Carrie Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak.

Both Johnsons were later told by police they faced no further action, according to Downing Street, and Mr Sunak has not received an additional FPN.

According to a source of the Telegraph, head of the civil service, Mr Case will come in for "stinging criticism" in the Gray report, as his role meant that "the ultimate responsibility" for the events was his.

But the Cabinet Office has declined to comment on the reports about him.

Did PM intentionally mislead parliament?

About 30 people, including Mr Johnson, have been contacted by the Cabinet Office to warn them of the contents of the document.

Tory MP Laura Farris has suggested she may resign as a ministerial aide at the Foreign Office in order to continue in her role on the Commons Privileges Committee, which is set to investigate whether the PM intentionally misled parliament over partygate.

Ms Farris, who is currently both a parliamentary private secretary (PPS) and a member of the committee, told BBC Radio 4's Westminster Hour programme the two roles were "incompatible" in the circumstances, and "that has to be resolved this week".

"One or other will go. If I am to remain on the committee, I will resign as a PPS so that there isn't that conflict," she said.

Asked which option she was leaning towards, she said she thought it would be "the right thing to do" to stay on the committee.

The committee's chairman, Labour MP Chris Bryant, previously recused himself from the parliamentary investigation, having made his views on Mr Johnson's conduct plain in the media.

SKY
 
Photos have emerged of the prime minister drinking at a gathering allegedly during the second lockdown.

The photos, obtained by ITV News, show Boris Johnson holding a glass with at least six other people around a table with several empty wine bottles, biscuits and crisps.

In the series of photos, the group appears to be toasting someone as Mr Johnson speaks. There is also a red ministerial box on a chair.

The gathering is said to have taken place for a leaving do for the PM's then-communication chief Lee Cain on 13 November 2020.

That was during the second national lockdown when people were only allowed to leave home for a limited number of reasons, including work if they could not work from home, and were not allowed to mix with other households inside.

On 8 December 2021, the PM was asked in parliament if there was a party in Downing Street on that day, to which he said: "No, but I am sure that whatever happened, the guidance was followed and the rules were followed at all times."

Two gatherings on that day were part of the Met Police's investigation that finished last week, and while others were fined for unspecified events, the PM was not.

The Lib Dems have written to the police watchdog to demand they open an investigation into the Met's partygate inquiry to establish how they reached a conclusion to not fine the PM for any event on 13 November 2020.

Labour's deputy leader, Angela Rayner, accused Mr Johnson of lying over rule-breaking parties at Downing Street and said he has "demeaned his office".

"While the British public were making huge sacrifices, Boris Johnson was breaking the law," she said.

"Boris Johnson said repeatedly that he knew nothing about law-breaking - there's no doubt now, he lied. Boris Johnson made the rules, and then broke them."

Thangam Debonnaire, shadow leader of the House of Commons, told Sky News the PM should "do the decent thing" and resign because members of the public were adhering to the rules while he was "having a good time with his mates".

These photos fire the starting gun on a week that will likely be very bumpy for the prime minister.

The Metropolitan Police have given Downing Street a large degree of cover because the force looked into events on the day in question and while some officials were fined, Boris Johnson was not.

Expect Number 10 to lean heavily on responses of this sort in the coming days as more gory details and pictures emerge.

The real political peril for the prime minister now is not really about what he did; but rather what he knew and said.

Asked directly in the House of Commons whether there were any parties in Downing Street on 13 November 2020, Mr Johnson was explicit: "No, but I'm sure whatever happened the guidance... and the rules were followed at all times."

It is very hard to reconcile that answer with these photos.

The big risk for the PM now is the full Sue Gray report may throw up more mismatches of this sort.

The photos have emerged on what is possibly the eve of the Sue Gray report into lockdown breaching events in Downing Street and Whitehall, which is expected to provide more detail than the police investigation.

A Number 10 spokesman said: "The Cabinet Office and the Met Police have had access to all information relevant to their investigations, including photographs.

"The Met have concluded their investigation and Sue Gray will publish her report in the coming days, at which point the prime minister will address parliament in full."

Parliament's Privileges Committee is set to begin an investigation into whether Mr Johnson knowingly misled MPs by denying any knowledge of the parties.

If he is found to have done so this would mean he had broken the ministerial code and would usually be a resigning matter.

The Met Police said they would not be commenting further following the conclusion of their investigation last week.

SKY
 
Tory MPs have criticised photos of Boris Johnson drinking with colleagues during lockdown ahead of the Sue Gray report into parties being published.

New pictures emerged on Monday of the prime minister appearing to toast colleagues allegedly during the second national lockdown when people were not allowed to mix with other households inside

SKY
 
Boris is bullet proof. He makes Teflon 'Trump' Don look like plastic.

Stand your ground Boris. Many citizens broke covid rules too, FACT, they are just suckered into the MSM narrative - bunch of hypocrites.
 
Sue Gray has provided her report into lockdown-busting parties in Downing Street to the prime minister, the Cabinet Office has confirmed.

Boris Johnson will make a statement on the report later, a Twitter feed for the leader of the House of Commons, Mark Spencer, said.
 
The Sue Gray report details rule-breaking events held across Downing Street and Whitehall during lockdowns - and it's 60 pages long.

Here, Sky News takes a look at her key criticisms of the government.

Deputy political editor Sam Coates has provided his analysis on the most important sections of the report in grey boxes.

Senior leadership 'must bear responsibility' for Downing Street culture

In her conclusions, Sue Gray says that she had already found "failures of leadership and judgment" across both Number 10 and the Cabinet Office in the update she gave back in January, before the Met Police announced its own investigation.

She elaborates by saying that many of the events she investigated were "attended by leaders in government" and "should not have been allowed to happen".

As a result, she writes, "more junior civil servants believed that their involvement was permitted given the attendance of senior leaders".

"The senior leadership at the centre, both political and official, must bear responsibility for this culture," she concludes.

"Many will be dismayed that behaviour of this kind took place on this scale at the heart of government. The public have a right to expect the very highest standards of behaviour in such places and clearly what happened fell well short of this. "

SAM SAYS...

This is the key judgment at the heart of this report.

The big question now is what it means.

We are told Boris Johnson isn't going to resign, and Simon Case the cabinet secretary is also not going to resign - so who will be taking responsibility?"

'Excessive alcohol' consumed on June 18

New details have emerged of the leaving party on 18 June 2020.

The event was split into two parts, the first was in the Cabinet Room and attended by more than 25 people, including Dominic Cummings and Simon Case, the then-permanent secretary for COVID and the pandemic response. It began between 6.30pm and 7pm and had ended by 7.40pm.

The second part moved into the cabinet secretary's private waiting room and wasn't attended by everyone who went to the first part. It began at around 7.50pm and "lasted several hours".

Sue Gray writes that "some brought pizza and prosecco" and that Helen MacNamara, the then-deputy cabinet secretary, "provided a karaoke machine".

Ms Gray reveals: "There was excessive alcohol consumption by some individuals. One individual was sick. There was a minor altercation between two other individuals."

On eve of Prince Philip's funeral last party-goer left at 4.20am

Two leaving parties took place in Downing Street on 16 April 2021 - the day before Prince Philip's heavily COVID-restricted funeral.

One was for then-director of Downing Street communications James Slack, and the other for an unnamed Number 10 official.

Detailing the event, Ms Gray writes: "A number of individuals gathered near a child's swing/slide in the garden, damaging it by leaning on and playing with it.

"This was noticed the next morning and reported to No 10 staff. Some individuals remained in the building and carried on drinking alcohol until the early hours."

Finally, the report says: "Exit logs indicate that some left after midnight and others between 1.45am and 2.45am. Two members of staff stayed later still, with one leaving at 3.11am and the last leaving at 4.20am."

Staff told to leave Christmas quiz via back door due to 'drunkenness'

Detailing the Christmas Zoom quiz on 15 December 2020, Ms Gray says that between 120 and 150 people were involved, including at least 18 in-person at 70 Whitehall.

After the prime minister joined the quiz to read out questions at around 7.50pm, a Number 10 official sent an internal message "referring to 'drunkenness' and advising staff to leave No 10 via the back exit".

"The No 10 official informed the investigation team that they did this in order to avoid staff being photographed by the press outside," Ms Gray writes.

Panic button triggered and police turn up at Christmas 'cheese and wine' night

On Friday, 18 December 2020 the usual, weekly "Wine Time Friday" event was held.

As this was the last working day of the year, it became a cheese and wine night to celebrate.

Laying out what happened, the report says: "At approximately 19.45 that evening, a panic alarm button was accidentally triggered by a member of staff.

"The custodians on duty responded, as did one of the police officers on No 10 door duty."

It adds: "There was food and alcohol available which had been bought and brought in by staff. Some members of staff drank excessively.

"The event was crowded and noisy such that some people working elsewhere in the No 10 building that evening heard significant levels of noise coming from what they characterised as a party in the Press Office.

"A cleaner who attended the room the next morning noted that there had been red wine spilled on one wall and on a number of boxes of photocopier paper."

Warning was sent that 'BYOB' Downing Street garden party could be a 'comms risk'

After receiving one of around 200 invites to the now-famous 'BYOB' drinks party in the Downing Street garden on 20 May 2020, the then-director of Downing Street communications Lee Cain warned it could be "somewhat of a comms risk".

The prime minister's principal private secretary Martin Reynolds told staff in his email: "After what has been an incredibly busy period we thought it would be nice to make the most of this lovely weather and have some socially distanced drinks in the garden this evening.

"Please join us from 6pm and bring your own booze!"

Mr Cain responded: “I’m sure it will be fine - and I applaud the gesture - but a 200 odd person invitation for drinks in the garden of no 10 is somewhat of a comms risk in the current environment.”

Although Dominic Cummings has claimed he also raised concerns at this point, Ms Gray says: "We have not found any documentary evidence of this."

SAM SAYS...
This was the height of the pandemic.

This was at a point when the government was telling everybody to stay at home.

Martin Reynolds was the most senior civil servant in Number 10 - the head of Boris Johnson's private office.

He was even warned about whether it was a good idea from none other than the Director of Communications, Lee Cain.

Not once, but twice – first in relation to the 20 May event, then another on 18 June.

I think that is going to be very difficult for Number 10.

Not least because the report also contains a whatsapp message from Reynolds to a Number 10 at a later unspecified date suggesting they had "got away with" it.

People were warned not to 'wave around' bottles of wine

A Number 10 special adviser warned staff attending the 'socially distanced drinks' on 20 May 2020 to be "mindful" that the TV press conference may still be going on and not to have alcohol on display.

The adviser said in a WhatsApp message to Martin Reynolds: "Drinks this eve is a lovely idea so I've shared with the E & V team who are in the office. Just to flag that the press conference will probably be finishing around that time, so helpful if people can be mindful of that as speakers and cameras are leaving, not walking around waving bottles of wine etc".

Martin Reynolds claimed he 'got away' with BYOB party

In an undated WhatsApp message, Mr Reynolds told a special adviser they had "got away with" the BYOB party on 20 May 2020.

The message read: "Best of luck - a complete non story but better than them focusing on our drinks (which we seem to have got away with)."

Staff 'felt unable' to raise concerns and there was 'poor treatment' of security/cleaners

In her conclusions, Sue Gray says that staff "witnessed or [had] been subjected to behaviours at work which they had felt concerned about but at times felt unable to raise properly".

"I was made aware of multiple examples of a lack of respect and poor treatment of security and cleaning staff," she writes.

Describing it as "unacceptable", she says she is "reassured to see that steps have been taken since to introduce more easily accessible means by which to raise concerns".

'Disappointing' some events only revealed through media

In her section on the scope of the investigation, Ms Gray says she regrets that some of the events may never have come to light if it wasn't for them being revealed by the media.

"I am very grateful to those who sought to provide as much information as possible in what I realise may have been a daunting experience given the public profile of this investigation," she says.

"It was also unfortunately the case that details of some events only became known to me and my team through reporting in the media. This is disappointing.

"Given the piecemeal manner in which events were brought to my attention, it is possible that events took place which were not the subject of investigation."

SKY
 
Last edited:
The recent batch of Tory MPs, particularly those who won fluke seats in the North are the most incompetent that we have ever seen.

It's highly likely that the tories will lose their majority regardless of who their leader is, but having Boris at the helm will only exacerbate their losses.

Time for him to go.
 
Details of drunkenness, fighting and late night parties at the heart of government have been laid bare in a damning report by Sue Gray - who said "senior leadership" must bear responsibility.

The long-awaited report, which also details karaoke, wine spillages, aides being sick and others being rude to security staff and cleaners, reveals behaviour in Downing Street during 2020 and 2021 at times when COVID-19 restrictions were in place across the country.

Some of the events were attended by Prime Minister Boris Johnson - who apologised again to parliament over the partygate scandal after the findings were published but said he knew nothing about events going on longer after he had briefly attended and was "appalled" when he later learned of them.

Ms Gray's report sums up her findings on 16 events in 2020 and 2021, including that:

A large number of people attended events and breached COVID guidelines
Staff felt unable to raise concerns about behaviour
Excessive alcohol consumption was reported, one person was sick and there was a fight
Drunkenness was reported and staff were told to leave via the back door
Senior leadership - political and official - must bear responsibility for the culture
Those in most junior positions attended gatherings at which their seniors were present, or had organised
There were "multiple examples" of a lack of respect and poor treatment of security and cleaning staff
The report included pictures of the prime minister holding drinks and detailed how staff had enjoyed gatherings from quizzes, leaving dos, "wine-time Fridays", a "bring your own booze" event and a cheese and wine evening.

Ms Gray concluded that many of them should not have been allowed to happen and that "some of the more junior civil servants believed that their involvement in some of these events was permitted given the attendance of senior leaders".

"The senior leadership at the centre, both political and official, must bear responsibility for this culture," she said.

Ms Gray said that she was disappointed that the existence of some of the events only reached her through media reports - suggesting that given the "piecemeal" way she found out about them there may have been more that she had not looked into.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the report "will stand as a monument to the hubris and arrogance of the government that believes it was one rule for them and another for everyone else".

Cabinet ministers including Foreign Secretary Liz Truss and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab lined up to offer the prime minister their backing.

Among the events that were looked at by Ms Gray's inquiry was a "socially distanced drinks" gathering in the Number 10 garden on 20 May 2020 held even though "some concerns were expressed about whether it was appropriate to hold the event".

An email invitation was sent by Martin Reynolds to around 200 Downing Street staff by Mr Johnson's principal private secretary telling people to "bring your own booze".

The report found Lee Cain, the prime minister's then-head of communications warned that the party would be a "comms risk".

A special adviser told Mr Reynolds that it would be "helpful" if people avoided "walking around with bottles of wine" ahead of the party as it was taking place after a press conference.

After the event, Mr Reynolds is found to have sent a message saying: "Best of luck - a complete non story but better than them focusing on our drinks (which we seem to have got away with)."

At another gathering on 18 June 2020 - featuring a karaoke machine, pizza and prosecco - Ms Gray found that an "excessive amount of alcohol" was consumed and that "one individual was sick" and there was a "minor altercation between two other individuals".

Ms Gray said her probe into an evening gathering in the Downing Street flat on 13 November, to which five special advisers were invited and in which food and alcohol were available, was curtailed when the Met police launched its investigation - and she decided not to resume it afterwards.

That event followed the announcement that senior adviser Dominic Cummings as well as Mr Cain - and was widely reported to have turned into a party with Abba being played.

A Christmas quiz event on 15 December 2020 featured some staff drinking alcohol - and a message on an internal Number 10 system referred to "drunkenness" while advising staff to leave via the back door "to avoid staff being photographed by the press outside".

At a pre-Christmas event on 18 December involving the Downing Street press office - featuring a "secret Santa" gift event, a quiz and an award ceremony, a panic alarm button was accidentally triggered by a member of staff - which was responded to by police and security staff.

A cleaner noticed the next morning that red wine had been spilled on a wall and on boxes of photocopier paper.

On 16 April 2021, the eve of the Duke of Edinburgh's funeral, when there were two separate leaving events in Number 10, with one featuring music played from a laptop on top of a printer, Ms Gray found that some people drank "excessively".

The two groups ended up in the Downing Street garden, where more than 20 were gathered just before 9.30pm with a number of bottles of alcohol, the report said.

Some gathered "near a child's swing/slide in the garden, damaging it by leaning on and playing with it".

A number carried on drinking until the early hours with the last member of staff leaving at 4.20am.

The prime minister told the House of Commons that he had truly believed when he issued an early update on the scandal that rules had been followed.

He said: "I am humbled and I have learnt a lesson."

There was mocking laughter in the chamber when the prime minister - who has resisted calls to quit over the affair said "the entire senior management has changed".

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told the prime minister it was "time to pack his bags" and that the Tories had "set the bar for his conduct lower than a snake's belly".

The prime minister responded by describing Sir Keir as "Sir Beer Korma" in reference to an investigation he is facing over an event in Durham.

Conservative MP Aaron Bell asked if there was any truth in the claim that Mr Johnson had asked Sue Gray whether she needed to publish her report following the conclusion of the Met Police's investigation.

The prime minister did not deny the claim explicitly, simply saying it was "a wholly independent report".

Some backbench Tories were among the fiercest in condemning Mr Johnson.

Tobias Ellwood, a long-time critic, asked the prime minister: "Can he think of any other prime minister who'd have allowed such a culture of indiscipline to take place under their watch and if it did would they not have resigned?"

The highly-anticipated publication of the full report from Ms Gray comes after police last week said they had concluded their investigation into lockdown-breaking events in Downing Street and Whitehall, which resulted in 126 fines being issued for 83 people.

Mr Johnson has already apologised after receiving one fine for attending a gathering in Downing Street to mark his birthday in June 2020 - and questions have been raised about why he did not receive penalties relating to other occasions.

An interim version of Ms Gray's report was published earlier this year, which criticised "failures of leadership and judgment".

But its contents were limited because the Met Police had asked for minimal reference to be made to some of the alleged gatherings, which were being investigated by detectives at the time.

Now that the police and Sue Gray inquiries have concluded, the prime minister faces a further probe by a Commons committee over claims he misled parliament.

SKY
 
The recent batch of Tory MPs, particularly those who won fluke seats in the North are the most incompetent that we have ever seen.

It's highly likely that the tories will lose their majority regardless of who their leader is, but having Boris at the helm will only exacerbate their losses.

Time for him to go.

Seems like Boris is still surviving somehow.

If his own party do not remove him then he will lead them to a comprehensive defeat at the next General Election.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Three in five Brits say Boris Johnson should resign after publication of Sue Gray's report, according to a snap <a href="https://twitter.com/YouGov?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@YouGov</a> poll. <br><br>And 74% believe that the PM knowingly lied about breaking lockdown rules, including a majority of Tory voters.</p>— Pippa Crerar (@PippaCrerar) <a href="https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/1529462629902782464?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Two more Tory MPs have withdrawn their support for Boris Johnson in the wake of Sue Gray's report into Downing Street lockdown parties.

The announcements by John Baron and David Simmonds follow a similar call by their backbench colleague Julian Sturdy on Wednesday.

Mr Baron said the findings by senior civil servant Ms Gray as well as the Met Police investigation into the episode "paint a shameful pattern of misbehaviour during the pandemic as the rest of us kept to the COVID regulations".

Politics live: Rishi Sunak to reveal further cost of living help

Mr Simmonds said it was "clear that while the government and our policies enjoy the confidence of the public the prime minister does not" and that it was time for "new leadership".

Mr Sturdy had already called for the PM to go in the wake of Ms Gray's report, saying it was "in the public interest for him to resign".

The latest statements mean that there are now 18 backbench Tory MPs publicly calling for the PM to quit while some others have been ambiguous, citing factors such as the war in Ukraine as reasons why they are staying their hand for now.

It is unclear how many have submitted letters of no confidence in Mr Johnson, with 54 required to trigger a vote by the parliamentary party on his leadership.

The announcements from the two MPs come a day after Ms Gray's report laid bare details of drunken parties, fighting and karaoke in Downing Street in 2020 and 2021 at times when COVID-19 restrictions were in place.

Mr Baron and Mr Simmonds went public shortly before an expected statement by Chancellor Rishi Sunak on a new package of measures to help households struggling with the surge in the cost of living.

Mr Sunak's move is seen as an attempt to move the agenda on after months in which the government has been dogged by the police investigation and Ms Gray's report into partygate.

The PM still faces an inquiry by a parliamentary committee into whether he misled MPs when he claimed at an earlier stage during the scandal that no rules were broken.

He has said he was appalled and humbled by Ms Gray's findings as he apologised during a series of appearances in the Commons, at a news conference, and in a closed-doors meeting of the 1922 committee of backbenchers after the report was published in full.

Mr Baron said in a statement: "The Sue Gray report and the Metropolitan Police investigations paint a shameful pattern of misbehaviour during the pandemic as the rest of us kept to the COVID regulations.

"However, for me the most serious charge against the prime minister is that of knowingly misleading parliament.

"Parliament is the beating heart of our nation.

"To knowingly mislead it can not be tolerated, no matter the issue. Whether or not the Prime Minister is an asset to the party or the country is of less importance."

"Having always said I would consider all the available evidence before deciding, I'm afraid the prime minister no longer enjoys my support - I can no longer give him the benefit of the doubt."

Mr Simmonds said: "I listened to what the prime minister had to say at Prime Minister's Questions, his statement and the 1922 committee yesterday following the publication of the Sue Gray report.

"Having reflected on what he said, and the views of constituents and my Conservative association, it is clear that while the government and our policies enjoy the confidence of the public the prime minister does not.

"Accordingly, it is time for him to step down so that new leadership can take forward the important work of the government in ensuring that our people and country prosper."

https://news.sky.com/story/boris-jo...down-over-sue-grays-partygate-report-12621686
 
Seems like Boris is still surviving somehow.

If his own party do not remove him then he will lead them to a comprehensive defeat at the next General Election.

17 MPs have declared that they have put their letters in.

Let’s say 17 more have done it covertly.

Another 20 on top of these would be required to trigger a leadership election.

Then another candidate would have to appear and have enough credibility to defeat Johnson.
 
Labour are going to win the next general vote I think.

The Tories, with Boris or not, have become a rotting corpse of a party and for now have run out of steam.

Some good announcements from the Conservatives today actually, but there won’t be a poll bounce as they have grown too much in political staleness and unpopularity.

They will exit office but then come back in the 2030s when we all get tired of Labour again.

And so it goes on. Lol
 
If the clown had any sort of decency, he'd resign and go count his kids or something.
 
Not sure any party wants to win the next election, going to be a grim time to be in power with inflation going through the roof and talk of power cuts in the winter.
 
Be careful what one wishes for. The last thing the UK wants in face of all the upcoming issues is PM Truss!
 
One of the youngest MPs in the Conservative Party has become the 26th Tory to publicly call for Boris Johnson to resign over the partygate scandal.

Elliot Colburn emailed his constituents to say that nothing within the Sue Gray report or the Met Police investigation has "convinced me that my decision to submit a letter to the 1922 committee (which I did some time ago) was the wrong one".

The MP for Carshalton and Wallington is one of the youngest Tory MPs and was 26 when he was elected in 2019. He hinted that he wanted the prime minister to resign in February.

He is one of a growing number of MPs publicly calling for Mr Johnson to go who helped him gain a big majority when he became prime minister in 2019.

Mr Colburn said that "further questions and revelations have subsequently come to light" since the end of the Met investigation and publication of the Sue Gray report.

"I am especially appalled at the revelations of the poor treatment of security and cleaning staff at No 10, so my letter remains submitted."

Earlier on Monday, Jeremy Wright, who was culture secretary and attorney general under Theresa May, became the 25th Tory MP to call for the prime minister to resign immediately since he was fined by the Met Police in April, according to a Sky News tally.

He posted a statement on his website saying "accountability and restoring faith in good government" required more than apologies and the moving on of civil servants if the government is to deliver on its election promises.

"It now seems to me that the prime minister remaining in office will hinder those crucial objectives," he wrote.

"I have therefore, with regret, concluded that, for the good of this and future governments, the prime minister should resign."

Politics hub: 26 MPs now want Boris Johnson to go immediately

Mr Wright did not reveal if he has sent a letter of no confidence to Sir Graham Brady, chair of the 1922 Committee of Tory MPs, who must receive 54 letters before a leadership vote can be called.

However, it is likely that he has after publicly calling for the prime minister to go after much consideration.

The trickle of Tory MPs calling for Mr Johnson's resignation has continued steadily since the Sue Gray report was released last Wednesday, with many questioning his explanation that he did not regard the gatherings as parties and saw them simply as work events.

A former lawyer and the MP for Kenilworth and Southam since 2005, Mr Wright had previously said Mr Johnson should go if he was found to have knowingly attended rule-breaking parties.

Like many Conservatives, he said he would make a judgment after the Met Police and Sue Gray had published their inquiries into the events, with the former concluding two weeks ago.

In his statement, Mr Wright said he had taken some time to think about the inquiries' conclusions and believes the prime minister did not knowingly mislead parliament when he said he had not broken the laws.

He said he accepts the prime minister did not know at the time he was breaking rules for the impromptu birthday he was fined for.

Read more from Sky News:
Which Conservative MPs have called on Boris Johnson to quit?

But, he said, it is "not only the prime minister's own legal culpability" that is relevant as Mr Johnson was asked in parliament about others breaking rules.

Mr Johnson said all guidance was followed - but the Met and Ms Gray have found otherwise.

Mr Wright said the debate about whether Mr Johnson misled parliament and the partygate investigations have had a "corrosive effect".

"In my view, there is clear evidence he has been negligent," he wrote.

"I believe he could and should have done more to satisfy himself that the assurances he had been given, and that he was in turn giving parliament, were indeed correct."

Conservative MP Nickie Aiken said Mr Johnson should put himself up for a vote of no confidence.

While she did not explicitly call on the prime minister to resign or confirm she had written a letter calling for a vote of no confidence, she was critical of what went on in Downing Street during COVID restrictions in 2020 and 2021.

The Cities of London and Westminster MP said the events had "damaged trust in the government and in the Conservative Party".

"If I were in the same position, I would put myself forward to the Conservative Parliamentary Party for a vote of confidence, end this speculation in order to allow the government to continue to meet the challenges the country faces, especially the cost of living crisis."

SKY
 
Labour are going to win the next general vote I think.

The Tories, with Boris or not, have become a rotting corpse of a party and for now have run out of steam.

Some good announcements from the Conservatives today actually, but there won’t be a poll bounce as they have grown too much in political staleness and unpopularity.

They will exit office but then come back in the 2030s when we all get tired of Labour again.

And so it goes on. Lol

Exactly, it’s an on going cycle, and I can guarantee you those calling for Boris’ resignation will be calling for the next PM’s resignation too.

I just hope the Liberals never come into power again, they absolutley destroyed this country between 2010-2015 leaving the country in the mess it is in now.
 
Partygate: John Stevenson submits letter of no confidence in Johnson - 28th Tory MP to publicly call for him to go

Another Conservative MP has submitted a letter of no confidence in Boris Johnson, making him the 28th Tory to publicly call for him to go over the partygate scandal.

John Stevenson, MP for Carlisle, said he has been "deeply disappointed" in the rule-breaking parties at Number 10 and Mr Johnson's response to parliament.

He said he has called for the PM to put himself forward for a vote of confidence to "draw a line" under the issue but said Mr Johnson appears unwilling to, so he has "taken the appropriate action" to get a vote of confidence to take place.

"The continuing criticism, revelations and questions are debilitating for the government at a time when there are so many other important and critical issues to be addressed," he added.

Mr Stevenson, who is also a lawyer, became an MP in 2010 and is seen as a moderate within the Conservative Party.

Letters of no confidence are handed into Sir Graham Brady, chair of the 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers.

A total of 54 letters - 15% of Tory MPs - must be submitted for a leadership vote to take place and only Sir Graham knows exactly how many have been handed in.

There has been a steady trickle of MPs expressing their displeasure in the PM since he was fined by the Met Police in April for attending his birthday gathering.

But since the Sue Gray report into lockdown breaking parties was published last Wednesday that has turned into more of a stream, with a growing number of former cabinet ministers joining the calls.

Mr Stevenson's announcement came shortly after Dame Andrea Leadsom, the former cabinet minister, condemned Mr Johnson's "unacceptable failings of leadership" over the partygate scandal.

The former business secretary was the 40th Conservative MP to have questioned Mr Johnson's position as prime minister since he was fined by the Met Police for breaching lockdown rules in Downing Street, according to a Sky News tally.

Dame Andrea sent a letter to her South Northamptonshire constituents on Monday, in which she said that after careful study of the Sue Gray report into partygate "it is painfully clear to me that given the extent and severity of rule-breaking taking place over a 20-month period, it is extremely unlikely that senior leaders were unaware of what was going on".

https://news.sky.com/story/partygat...ry-mp-to-publicly-call-for-him-to-go-12624754
 
Exactly, it’s an on going cycle, and I can guarantee you those calling for Boris’ resignation will be calling for the next PM’s resignation too.

I just hope the Liberals never come into power again, they absolutley destroyed this country between 2010-2015 leaving the country in the mess it is in now.

2010 - 2015??? Liberals??

This was the period when the Cameron led conservatives implemented their Policy of austerity which completely destroyed the working class. In the last 30 years, UK best period of financial prosperity came under Blair.
 
2010 - 2015??? Liberals??

This was the period when the Cameron led conservatives implemented their Policy of austerity which completely destroyed the working class. In the last 30 years, UK best period of financial prosperity came under Blair.

Nice try, 2009 financial crisis was the result of Austerity between 2010-2015, not Cameron, more so, we are still reeling from that financial disaster today.

I am talking about the coalition of 2010-2015. Nick Clegg and his antics.

Not talking about Blair, though Brown did contribute to the financial crisis, by handing the BoE more power and the banks too.
 
Last edited:
Partygate: Dominic Raab plays down Tory leadership challenge to PM

Dominic Raab has dismissed claims Boris Johnson is about to face a leadership contest, despite growing resignation calls from Tory MPs.

Speculation is mounting that Mr Johnson could soon face a no-confidence vote over widespread Covid rule-breaking in Downing Street.

But deputy PM Mr Raab said this was "Westminster talking to itself".

It comes as the PM's standards adviser called on him to say how his actions complied with ministerial rules.

Lord Geidt said Mr Johnson had failed to publicly set out why his fine for breaking Covid rules did not also break the rules governing ministers' behaviour, which say they must comply with the law.

Breaking the ministerial code is normally seen as a resigning matter.

In a written reply, Mr Johnson said he had not fallen foul of ministerial rules because he had not broken Covid laws on purpose.

Downing Street has not denied reports that Lord Geidt threatened to quit over the prime minister's actions, which he said in a report had undermined his role as ethics adviser.

The BBC has been told Lord Geidt does not intend to hand in his resignation over the row.

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner accused the prime minister of ignoring Lord Geidt's advice, and finding himself innocent of breaching ministerial rules in "his own courtroom".

Adding that Mr Johnson was "dodging questions", she called for him to "make a statement" on his "apparent breach" of the rules.

Twelve Conservative MPs have so far called on Mr Johnson to resign since senior civil servant Sue Gray released her report on lockdown rule-breaking in Downing Street last week.

In total, 28 have gone public with calls for a no-confidence vote in the PM. Most of them have submitted letters of no confidence in the PM, but the total number may be higher.

Mr Johnson, as well as his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak, were fined by Met police for breaking Covid laws by attending one of the gatherings investigated by Ms Gray.

Under party rules, Tory backbenchers can force a vote on the prime minister's leadership if 54 of them submit letters of no confidence in him.

Only Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, who organises leadership contests, knows how many letters have been submitted.

On Monday, former Tory leader Lord Hague said the party's MPs were "very troubled" about the contents of the Gray report, and he predicted the PM could face a no-confidence vote as early as next week.

If a no-confidence vote took place and Mr Johnson lost, it would trigger a contest to replace him as Tory leader and prime minister.

There is no consensus among Tory MPs about who should be their next leader, but Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, Trade Minister Penny Mordaunt, former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt and senior backbencher Tom Tugendhat are among those being discussed as possible challengers.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak was widely seen as a potential leadership rival to the PM, but his prospects are thought to have waned after he picked up his own Partygate fine and was embroiled in a controversy over his wife's finances earlier this year.

Senior Tory MP Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown said the row over ministerial rules would "undoubtedly contribute" to questions over the PM's leadership.

But he told BBC Radio 4 that "at the moment" he believed the Conservative Party should "leave matters as they are" and "continue with the present PM".

"You've got to actually work out whether that new prime minister is actually going to be a positive asset to the country, compared to what you've got at the moment," he added.

"As to what he's actually committed, the crimes that he's actually committed, and work out whether we should have a change or not."

Asked on BBC Breakfast whether he believed Mr Johnson would lead the Conservatives into the next election, Mr Raab replied: "Yes".

He added that Partygate had raised "significant issues", but added: "I don't think this ends in a leadership challenge".

Speaking on Sky News, he added that he did not know the number of no-confidence letters sent, but he doubted it was "that high".

Asked whether there would be a leadership challenge, he replied: "No. I think the Westminster bubble, village, whips this stuff up".

"To be honest, votes of no confidence, leadership contests, all of that is yet more of Westminster talking to itself, not talking to the public".

He said questions about whether Mr Johnson broke the ministerial code "have been answered" by the PM.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-61657209
 
Boris Johnson has said he was "very, very surprised" to receive a fine for attending a lockdown-breaking gathering in Downing Street.

The prime minister, talking to Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts, was questioned on issues from partygate and Northern Ireland to nappies and his favourite book to read to his children.
 
Dominic Raab is probably a genuine contendor for the role. The stock of both Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak has fallen quite sharply.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This idea that the “payroll“ will vote to keep <a href="https://twitter.com/BorisJohnson?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@BorisJohnson</a> in a secret ballot is deluded. I can think of five ministers who have already told me they will vote him out. And no, you won’t guess who.</p>— Chris Bryant (@RhonddaBryant) <a href="https://twitter.com/RhonddaBryant/status/1532049704703385600?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 1, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING Boris Johnson booed as he attends Queen's Jubilee service with his wife Carrie <a href="https://t.co/vrSFD8V26w">https://t.co/vrSFD8V26w</a> <a href="https://t.co/623iDySl88">pic.twitter.com/623iDySl88</a></p>— Mirror Breaking News (@MirrorBreaking_) <a href="https://twitter.com/MirrorBreaking_/status/1532661575215095808?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 3, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Boris has even lost the right-leaning royalists now.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING Boris Johnson booed as he attends Queen's Jubilee service with his wife Carrie <a href="https://t.co/vrSFD8V26w">https://t.co/vrSFD8V26w</a> <a href="https://t.co/623iDySl88">pic.twitter.com/623iDySl88</a></p>— Mirror Breaking News (@MirrorBreaking_) <a href="https://twitter.com/MirrorBreaking_/status/1532661575215095808?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 3, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Boris has even lost the right-leaning royalists now.

Not according to Mad Nad. :facepalm:

Also top trolling from the Palace to get Johnson to read, from Philippians 2:

'Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests, but to the interests of others.'
 
Lee Mack cracked a joke at Boris expense during the concert outside the palace.

I was really hoping the camera would pan to the Royal Box!
 
Rebel Conservative MPs say they expect a no confidence vote in Boris Johnson to be held in the coming days.

Letters expressing no confidence in the prime minister must be submitted by 54 Tory MPs to trigger a challenge.
 
Now the Jubilee is over, the 1922 Chairman may act.
 
Dominic Raab is probably a genuine contendor for the role. The stock of both Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak has fallen quite sharply.

Raab is too thick. World leaders would run rings round him.

They would do better to go outside the Johnson cabal and try someone capable such as Tugendhat.
 
<b>BBC: a vote of confidence in Boris Johnson will be held by Conservative MPs</b>

Vote will be held from 18:00 to 20:00 BST

If PM loses, he will stand down as prime minister

The vote was triggered after at least 54 Conservative MPs asked for it

But at least 180 Conservative MPs - a majority - will have to vote against him, if he is to leave

The vote follows anger over Sue Gray's report detailing lockdown rule-breaking in Downing Street
 
<b>BBC: a vote of confidence in Boris Johnson will be held by Conservative MPs</b>

Vote will be held from 18:00 to 20:00 BST

If PM loses, he will stand down as prime minister

The vote was triggered after at least 54 Conservative MPs asked for it

But at least 180 Conservative MPs - a majority - will have to vote against him, if he is to leave

The vote follows anger over Sue Gray's report detailing lockdown rule-breaking in Downing Street

With Labour well ahead in the polls and a lot of Red Wall Tories nervous about their jobs, while the Lib Dems chip away at the Blue Wall, I think it will be close but he will hang on.

Thatcher had enough honour to resign when she lost 35% of her Parliamentary support but this guy will cling on if he wins by one vote. How long that will be tenable is a different matter. A challenger will emerge.
 
Boris surving the no confidence would be a massive boost to Labour.

There is surely no way he can hang on.

I hope the Tory MPs will do the decent thing here and boot him out.
 
I think he’s effectively done — his party will either sling him out (and they should), but if he hangs on by even a single vote he will dig his heels in & will need to be dragged out of Number 10 via a direct leadership challenge backed by a large faction of backbench MPs. Been a trainwreck of a PM!
 
I think he’s effectively done — his party will either sling him out (and they should), but if he hangs on by even a single vote he will dig his heels in & will need to be dragged out of Number 10 via a direct leadership challenge backed by a large faction of backbench MPs. Been a trainwreck of a PM!

Yeah he's toast, it's only a matter of time before his party ejects him.
 
It makes no difference if it’s buffoon Boris or another slimey Tory leader or even if Starmer comes in, they are all the same & serve others not the people. It’s easy for them as most of uk lack intelligence. They will sit there waving their little Union Jack even when they can’t afford to help their Nan with heating bills .
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I’m sorry to have to resign as the PM’s Anti-Corruption Tsar but, after his reply last week about the Ministerial Code, it’s pretty clear he has broken it. That’s a resigning matter for me, and it should be for the PM too. Here’s my letter to him explaining why. <a href="https://t.co/0Wi6QWsMbI">pic.twitter.com/0Wi6QWsMbI</a></p>— John Penrose (@JohnPenroseNews) <a href="https://twitter.com/JohnPenroseNews/status/1533753928483061760?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 6, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
It makes no difference if it’s buffoon Boris or another slimey Tory leader or even if Starmer comes in, they are all the same & serve others not the people. It’s easy for them as most of uk lack intelligence. They will sit there waving their little Union Jack even when they can’t afford to help their Nan with heating bills .

Any alternative which will veto support to Ukraine would be welcome but that’s not going to happen. They say cost of living is a big issue but take action which is the opposite. Even Macron has displayed more diplomacy then this git who acts mainly in his own interest in a desperate bid to save his job
 
All these MPs etc resigning because the PM broke the ministerial code.

Save the moral ground, you look worse than Amber Heard! Nobody cares!
 
Do not underestimate the lengths Boris Johnson will go to remain in power. He's waited his entire life to be PM.

His career has shown repeatedly that he will promise anything, bribe anyone and U-turn on any of his previous statements on a dime to climb up the greasy pole.

He won't go easily.
 
MPs shouldn't override 14 million Johnson voters, says Dorries

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has been on the BBC News channel, where she's asked about the possibility that 100 or even 150 MPs might vote against Boris Johnson tonight.

She says 14 million people voted for Boris Johnson in 2019 - "is it the place of a minority of MPs to override that?"

"Everybody always tries to write Boris Johnson off but all I would say is look at his track record," she says, pointing to his victories in London mayoral elections and the Brexit referendum.

She says the Conservatives need to "stick together" - and is asked whether her attack on potential leadership contender Jeremy Hunt is an example of that.

Dorries says she stands by her criticisms of Hunt, and claims he said he would not challenge the PM while the war in Ukraine continues.

She says she is "absolutely confident, 100% confident" that Johnson will win, but declines to give an estimate of his victory margin.

BBC
 
Back
Top