No 10 denies claim UK PM was warned about lockdown drinks party

(Alliance News) - Downing Street has denied claims by Dominic Cummings that UK Prime Minister ...

Alliance News 18 January, 2022 | 8:31AM
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(Alliance News) - Downing Street has denied claims by Dominic Cummings that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson was told in advance staff were holding a drinks party in the No 10 garden in the midst of the first Covid lockdown.

Johnson's former chief adviser said he was prepared to "swear under oath" that the prime minister was lying when he told members of Parliament he had not known beforehand about the "bring your own bottle" event on May 20 2020.

In the Commons last week Johnson admitted spending 25 minutes at the gathering saying he had believed "implicitly" that it was a work event.

But in his latest salvo at the man he once worked for, Cummings said both he and another senior official had challenged Martin Reynolds, the prime minister's principal private secretary who sent out invitations to around 100 staff, as to whether it was within the rules.

He said he believed that Reynolds then checked with Johnson who had agreed the event should go ahead.

When he tried to raise the issue with the prime minister directly he said his objections were brushed aside.

"I said to the PM something like: 'Martin's invited the building to a drinks party, this is what I'm talking about, you've got to grip this madhouse'. The PM waved it aside," Cummings wrote in his blog.

He added: "The events of May 20 alone, never mind the string of other events, mean the PM lied to Parliament about parties.

"Not only me but other eyewitnesses who discussed this at the time would swear under oath this is what happened."

In response a No 10 spokesman said Johnson had apologised to the House and that he "believed implicitly" that he had been attending a work event.

"It is untrue that the prime minister was warned about the event in advance," the spokesman said, adding Johnson would be making a further statement when Sue Gray, the senior civil servant investigating partying in Whitehall during lockdown, has completed her inquiry.

The allegations will potentially add to the pressure on Johnson, who is facing calls to resign from some Tory MPs amid widespread voter anger at reports that Covid rules were flouted by No 10.

Allies of the prime minister have been mounting a fightback, dubbed operation red meat, with a series of populist policies, freezing the TV licence and putting the Royal Navy in charge of operations to prevent migrant boats crossing the Channel in an attempt to regain support.

Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner said Johnson did not need to wait for Gray's report and called on him to step down.

By Gavin Cordon, PA Whitehall Editor

source: PA

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