No 10 refuses to guarantee any partygate fines will be made public

Politics

Downing Street has refused to guarantee that the public will be told if fines are issued over lockdown-busting parties.

Speaking to journalists at a regular Westminster briefing, the prime minister‘s spokesman said it is for the Metropolitan Police to decide whether to make such information public.

‘Positive’ mood among Tory MPs as PM appears to have staved off immediate threat – Sue Gray report live

“It will be the Met that sets out what they see fit at the conclusion of their work and I would not seek to set out what that may or may not be,” he said.

Number 10 ‘cannot be allowed to backtrack’

Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner said the public “have a right to know” if Boris Johnson is given a fine.

“Number 10 said they would publish the full report. They cannot be allowed to backtrack or hide the results of the police investigation,” she said.

More on Boris Johnson

Sir Ed Davey, leader of the Liberal Democrats, said: “This stinks of a cover up by Number 10. Even Richard Nixon [the US president who resigned over the Watergate scandal] believed a country deserves to know whether their leader is a crook.

“Boris Johnson must come clean with the public and resign if he’s broken the rules and been fined by the police.”

Number 10’s latest comments come after the release of a partial version of Sue Gray‘s report into Downing Street gatherings during COVID-19 restrictions in 2020 and 2021.

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1:47

‘People feel they’ve been taken for mugs’

The senior civil servant said the events represented a “serious failure” and were “difficult to justify”.

Facing MPs in the Commons on Monday, Mr Johnson apologised and promised a shake-up of Number 10, insisting: “I get it and I will fix it.”

The Metropolitan Police is investigating 12 gatherings, including an event that happened at the Downing Street flat on 13 November 2020 and an event to mark the PM’s birthday on 19 June 2020.

The force said on Monday that it has received more than 300 photos and 500 pieces of paper as part of its inquiries.

Downing Street has said Mr Johnson will ask Ms Gray to “update her work” once the Metropolitan Police’s investigation is finished and “he will publish that update”.

People ‘feel like they’ve been taken for mugs’

Speaking to Sky News earlier on Monday, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said people who followed COVID rules “will feel like they’ve been taken for mugs” by the PM.

He told Kay Burley that many members of the public will have felt “anger, grief and guilt” when looking back at how they obeyed COVID-19 restrictions over the last two years and the sacrifices they had to make.

Sir Keir said Mr Johnson is “debasing the office” of PM and has “got to go” in the wake of the release of a partial version of the Gray report, which he described as being as “damning as it could be”.

Also speaking to Burley, deputy PM Dominic Raab claimed Mr Johnson cannot answer specific questions about lockdown parties in Downing Street because he does not want to prejudice the police investigation.

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1:43

‘I get argument about double standards’

“If he does start answering specific questions that have been referred to the police, he will be accused, in fact fairly and rightly, of prejudicing or preventing or interfering in that investigation,” Mr Raab said.

He said it was right that police were now given the “time and space” to carry out their investigation.

Sir Keir said Mr Raab’s stance was “nonsense” and “bordering on the ridiculous”, accusing the PM of “forcing all of his frontbenchers onto your programmes and others to make complete fools of themselves, peddling these absurd defences”.

Blackford defends Commons outburst

SNP Westminster leader Ian Blackford told Sky News that people are “outraged by a prime minister that simply won’t accept responsibility”.

Speaking to Kay Burley, he said Mr Johnson has “demeaned the office and he should have gone by now”.

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0:28

PM is ‘stranger to the truth’

Mr Blackford was thrown out of the Commons on Monday for accusing the PM of having “wilfully misled” MPs over the partygate row.

He defended his actions as the “right thing to do”, adding: “At the end of the day I’ve been sent to Westminster to stand up for our constituents, to lead the SNP at Westminster.

“I have to call out the PM for the charlatan that he is.”