November 28, 2024

Boris Johnson insists Partygate leaving dos were ‘essential for work purposes’ during grilling by MPs – UK politics live

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Key events

  • 2h ago

    Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson to be paid £100,000 a year for hosting GB News show

  • 2h ago

    Boris Johnson’s evidence to privileges committee – snap verdict

  • 3h ago

    Johnson says his supporters should not be calling committee kangaroo court

  • 3h ago

    Rishi Sunak paid more than £400,000 in tax last year, tax return shows

  • 3h ago

    Harriet Harman tells Johnson assurances he relied on when speaking to MPs were ‘flimsy’

  • 3h ago

    Johnson confirms he was not told explicitly that 18 December Christmas drinks were within Covid guidance

  • 4h ago

    Johnson suggests he should have told MPs following guidance did not, to him, meaning following it perfectly

  • 4h ago

    Johnson says by 8 December 2021 he realised he was getting ‘conflicting information’ about Christmas drinks year before

  • 4h ago

    Boris Johnson says Lee Cain concerned about ‘optics’ of Downing Street garden drinks event

  • 4h ago

    Boris Johnson says birthday gathering in June 2020 was ‘reasonably necessary’ for work purposes

  • 5h ago

    Johnson suggests ‘unsocially distanced farewell gatherings’ were allowed at work under Covid guidance

  • 5h ago

    22 Tory MPs vote against government on NI protocol deal, division list reveals

  • 5h ago

    Johnson says Covid guidance allowed exemptions, and Jenkin says if he had said this to MPs, inquiry might not be happening

  • 5h ago

    Boris Johnson says No 10 leaving do was ‘essential for work purposes’

  • 5h ago

    Sunak wins vote on Northern Ireland protocol deal, with only 29 MPs voting against

  • 5h ago

    Johnson suggests Harriet Harman, the privileges committee chair, is biased against him

  • 5h ago

    Johnson says committee is in effect accusing civil servants and advisers of ‘lying’ about Partygate too

  • 6h ago

    Johnson evidence paused as MPs vote on NI protocol

  • 6h ago

    Johnson says if it should have been obvious to him rules were broken, it should have been obvious to Rishi Sunak too

  • 6h ago

    Johnson claims privileges committee’s approach to publishing evidence ‘manifestly unfair’

  • 6h ago

    Johnson says Sue Gray told him twice she did not think Partygate events passed ‘threshold of criminality’

  • 6h ago

    Johnson tells MPs – ‘hand on heart, I did not lie to the house’

  • 6h ago

    Johnson swears oath promising to tell truth as he commences his evidence

  • 6h ago

    Privileges committee ‘make kangaroo courts look respectable’, says Rees-Mogg

  • 6h ago

    Rees-Mogg says he will vote against NI protocol deal even though Stormont brake ‘could be useful’

  • 7h ago

    PMQs – snap verdict

  • 8h ago

    ERG says it is advising its members to vote against Sunak’s NI protocol deal

  • 9h ago

    Drinking wine in garden during work meeting within Covid rules, Johnson told Sue Gray

  • 9h ago

    Steve Baker says Johnson risks being seen as ‘pound shop Nigel Farage because of stance on Northern Ireland protocol

  • 9h ago

    Johnson ‘often’ joined Friday night drinks in press office and could have ‘shut them down’ if he wanted, MPs told

  • 10h ago

    Johnson ignored advice from senior official not to tell MPs all Covid guidance was followed, evidence shows

  • 10h ago

    Cabinet secretary Simon Case says he never told Johnson all Covid rules and guidance were followed in No 10

  • 10h ago

    ‘I don’t know what we say about the flat’ – new Partygate evidence raises fresh questions for Johnson

  • 10h ago

    Johnson urges Sunak to revive confrontational approach to EU as he confirms he will vote against protocol deal

  • 11h ago

    Commons privileges committee publishes evidence bundle ahead of Johnson’s evidence session

  • 11h ago

    Liz Truss to vote against Sunak’s Northern Ireland protocol deal

  • 11h ago

    Boris Johnson says he will vote against Rishi Sunak’s Brexit deal as he prepares to face Partygate inquiry

  • Boris Johnson leaving his home in London this morning – or rather a home belonging to Lord Bamford and his wife, where he and his family have been staying for free since autumn last year. Photograph: Carl Court/Getty ImagesSteve Baker says Johnson risks being seen as ‘pound shop Nigel Farage because of stance on Northern Ireland protocol

    Turning back to the Northern Ireland protocol deal vote for a moment, Steve Baker, the Northern Ireland minister, has said that Boris Johnson risks being remembered as a “pound shop Nigel Farage” for his stance on the Windsor framework.

    Baker said that reviving the Northern Ireland protocol bill, Johnson’s declared alternative to Rishi Sunak’s deal (see 9.40am), would “wreck our relations with the European Union and damage our standing internationally”. Sky’s Sam Coates has posted the full quote on Twitter.

    Liz Truss has not publicly called for the Northern Ireland protocol bill to be revived. But, in a briefing to journalists this morning, a source familiar with her thinking said that “as the instigator of the Northern Ireland protocol bill” (she introduced it as foreign secretary) she felt that Sunak’s deal did not satisfactorily resolve the problems thrown up by the protocol.

    Johnson ‘often’ joined Friday night drinks in press office and could have ‘shut them down’ if he wanted, MPs told

    In its report earlier this month the privileges committee said there was evidence that Boris Johnson sometimes used to join the regular Friday night drinks events in the No 10 press office. The report said that information came from evidence submitted to the committee, but it did not supply the quote.

    Now we’ve got it. It is attributed to a No 10 official, who said that Johnson could have stopped these gathering if he wanted to. The official said:

    The former prime minister often saw and joined these gatherings, either he was invited by Spads [special advisers] or spotted them whilst walking up to his flat.

    The route he took down the corridor looks straight into the press room and vestibule so it’s impossible not to see.

    He had the opportunity to shut them down but joined in, made speeches, had a drink with staff.

    He could have taken the issue up with Martin Reynolds, his principal private secretary, to shut them down.

    He could see what was happening and allowed the culture to continue.

    Evidence from official Photograph: Privileges committee

    In his statement yesterday Johnson said that he could not properly respond to the evidence that he sometimes joined Friday night drinks in the press office because the committee had not set out the allegation in detail. He said:

    The fourth report contains an opaque reference to Friday night “press pffice gatherings” which I am said to have “occasionally joined” (at §21). No further detail is provided, and no such specific events are identified by the committee. Insofar as any allegation is made by the committee, it is incumbent on the committee to make it so that I can respond to it. That is particularly so if the committee are referring to an event that has never previously been identified or investigated by Sue Gray or the Metropolitan police.

    Johnson ignored advice from senior official not to tell MPs all Covid guidance was followed, evidence shows

    In his evidence yesterday Boris Johnson revealed that his principal private secretary, advised him to take out a reference to all the Covid guidance being followed in No 10 from a script he was going to use at PMQs on 8 December 2021.

    Johnson’s evidence repeatedly stressed the difference between rules and guidance. He did tells MPs that both the rules and the guidance were followed, but the document he published yesterday implied he accepts that the claim about the guidance being followed all the time was more questionable.

    Today the privileges committee has published the full quote from Reynolds in its bundle.

    Reynolds evidence Photograph: Privileges committee

    Reynolds has the wrong date; this PMQs was on the 8 December.

    At PMQs Johnson ignored the advice saying he should take out the reference to guidance and told MPs: “The guidance was followed and the rules were followed at all times.”

    Cabinet secretary Simon Case says he never told Johnson all Covid rules and guidance were followed in No 10

    The new evidence also shows that Simon Case, the cabinet secretary, says that he never told Boris Johnson that Covid rules and guidance were followed at all time in Downing Street, and that he never assured him no parties were held.

    Case also said he was not aware of anyone else giving Johnson these assurances.

    He gave these answers in evidence to the committee.

    Case evidence Photograph: Privileges committee

    As cabinet secretary, Case is the most senior civil servant in No 10. But he is not necessarily the person who briefs the PM most regularly, or whom Johnson would have relied on most for a briefing before PMQs.

    ‘I don’t know what we say about the flat’ – new Partygate evidence raises fresh questions for Johnson

    The bundle of evidence published by the privileges committee this morning is full of interesting material. Here is a passage showing an exchange between Jack Doyle, the director of communications at the time, and an official when they were discussing how to respond to the first media inquiry, from Pippa Crerar (then at the Mirror, now the Guardian’s political editor) about Partygate.

    “I don’t know what we say about the flat,” Doyle said.

    That is a reference to the so-called Abba party in the Downing Street flat, which involved Abba music being played so loud that it could be heard in the No 10 press office several floors below. Carrie Johnson, Boris’s wife, was reportedly celebrating the departure of Dominic Cummings with friends.

    Sue Gray did not properly investigate this for her report, and Johnson himself only made one oblique reference to it in his evidence yesterday.

    Evidence – exchange with Jack Doyle Photograph: Privileges committee/Privileges commiteeeJohnson urges Sunak to revive confrontational approach to EU as he confirms he will vote against protocol deal

    We knew that Boris Johnson would not be voting for Rishi Sunak’s Northern Ireland protocol deal. He said so in a speech earlier this month. But to vote against, as he has said he will do today, makes his rebellion much more serious.

    What is even more provocative is the reason he has given for voting against. In a statement given overnight to Daily Telegraph, he said:

    The proposed arrangements would mean either that Northern Ireland remained captured by the EU legal order – and was increasingly divergent from the rest of the UK – or they would mean that the whole of the UK was unable properly to diverge and take advantage of Brexit.

    That is not acceptable. I will be voting against the proposed arrangements today. Instead, the best course of action is to proceed with the Northern Ireland protocol bill, and make sure that we take back control.

    The Northern Ireland protocol bill is the legislation that would allow the UK government to ignore parts of the protocol unilaterally. Many lawyers argued that it was illegal under international law, because it would involve the UK breaking a treaty it has signed.

    Johnson introduced the bill when he was prime minister, and he has argued that the threat of British unilateral action made the EU more inclined to negotiate. Sunak has now abandoned the bill.

    But proposing bringing it back, Johnson is not just arguing for tweaks to the deal that has been negotiated. He is in effect saying that it should be ripped up, and that Britain should revive the threat to just ignore the treaty with the EU that it agreed in 2019 (when he himself was PM).

    This goes much further than what most other Tory or DUP critics of the deal have said, and, if it were ever implemented, would ignite diplomatic war with Brussels.

    Commons privileges committee publishes evidence bundle ahead of Johnson’s evidence session

    The Commons privileges committee has now published a bundle of evidence that Boris Johnson and the MPs questioning him may refer to during today’s session. It runs to 110 pages and it’s here.

    In a statement the committee says:

    The documents comprise the evidence and materials that will be referred to in the course of oral questioning by MPs. Much of the material has already been previously published, including in the committee’s fourth report.

    All evidence has already been shared with the witness two weeks ago, in unredacted form. The documents published this morning are materials that the committee and Mr Johnson have selected, that will be referred to in the course of the oral evidence session later today. The committee is now publishing these materials for the benefit of those following the oral evidence session so that they’re able to follow proceedings accordingly.

    Liz Truss to vote against Sunak’s Northern Ireland protocol deal

    Liz Truss will join Boris Johnson in voting against Rishi Sunak’s Northern Ireland protocol deal today, PA Media is reporting, quoting a source close to Truss.

    Truss is understood to believe the Windsor framework deal does not “satisfactorily resolve the issues thrown up by” the Northern Ireland protocol and “almost fatally impinges” on the UK’s ability to diverge from EU rules and regulations.

    Boris Johnson says he will vote against Rishi Sunak’s Brexit deal as he prepares to face Partygate inquiry

    Good morning. Does it matter if ministers don’t tell the truth to parliament? In theory the answer is yes, and ever since John Profumo lied to MPs about his relationship with Christine Keeler, Erskine May, the parliamentary rulebook, has been explicit about misleading the Commons being a potential contempt of parliament. But has parliament got the will and the means to enforce this? That is what today’s privileges committee hearing with Boris Johnson is really all about.

    For more background, you can read all our Partygate coverage here, and my colleague Archie Bland has a good one-stop summary of what to expect here.

    Some reports say the Johnson hearing could last for up to five hours, and we’ve also got PMQs. But that’s not all. The God of News is particularly bountiful today, and we have also got a vote on Rishi Sunak’s Northern Ireland protocol deal, with confirmation overnight that Johnson (him again) will be voting against. My colleague Aletha Adu has the details.

    Here is the agenda for the day.

    9am: The Commons privileges committee publishes a bundle of evidence relevant to its inquiry into Johnson.

    12pm: Rishi Sunak faces Keir Starmer at PMQs.

    After 12.45pm: MP begin the debate on regulations implementing the Stormont brake part of the Windsor framework, the revised version of the Northern Ireland protocol. The vote will come 90 minutes after the debate starts.

    2pm: Johnson starts giving evidence to the privileges committee

    I’ll try to monitor the comments below the line (BTL) but it is impossible to read them all. If you have a direct question, do include “Andrew” in it somewhere and I’m more likely to find it. I do try to answer questions, and if they are of general interest I will post the question and reply above the line (ATL), although I can’t promise to do this for everyone.

    If you want to attract my attention quickly, it is probably better to use Twitter. I’m on @AndrewSparrow.

    Alternatively, you can email me at andrew.sparrow@theguardian.com.

    Updated at 07.58 EDT

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