Sabtu, 24 April 2021

Dominic Cummings: No 10 defends Boris Johnson after former aide's blog post - BBC News

Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings
Reuters

Downing Street has defended Boris Johnson's conduct after former top adviser Dominic Cummings questioned the PM's "competence and integrity".

Once his closest ally, Mr Cummings made a string of allegations about the PM.

The ex-aide alleged the PM had tried to quash an inquiry into leaks from No 10 and also claimed he had plans for donors to pay for renovating his flat.

No 10 said ministers had always obeyed codes of conduct and electoral law but Labour has called for an investigation.

And former Conservative cabinet minister Dominic Grieve, a long-standing critic of Mr Johnson, described the prime minister as a "vacuum of integrity".

Mr Cummings was forced out of his Downing Street role at the end of last year, following an internal power struggle.

One government minister described Mr Cummings as "disgruntled and discredited" following his departure.

  • denied leaking text messages sent between Mr Johnson and businessman Sir James Dyson
  • denied leaking details of the second coronavirus lockdown in England in November
  • alleged Mr Johnson had considered trying to block an inquiry into the leak in case it involved a friend of his fiancee Carrie Symonds - a claim rejected by No 10
  • claimed the prime minister once had a "possibly illegal" plan for donors to pay for renovations of his Downing Street flat

Mr Cummings promised to answer questions about "any" issues when he appears before a Parliamentary inquiry into the government's pandemic response on 26 May.

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Analysis box by Jonathan Blake, political correspondent

This is an explosive intervention from a man Boris Johnson used to count on as one of his closest allies.

And if you're tempted to roll your eyes and think it's just sour grapes from a jilted adviser, think again.

Dominic Cummings' blog is proof that he is willing to lift the lid on his time at the heart of Downing Street, regardless of how it reflects on the prime minister.

Beyond his denial of leaking text messages, he has also given his version of events relating to two potential political weak spots for Boris Johnson.

They are the questions over the financing of the renovation of the Downing Street flat and the leaking of a plan to impose a lockdown.

The level of detail shows that Mr Cummings is willing to expose others while defending himself and lay bare the inner workings of No 10.

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In his blog, Mr Cummings claimed the prime minister once planned to have donors "secretly pay" for renovation of his official Downing street flat.

Like several of his recent predecessors, Mr Johnson is living in the flat above No 11 Downing Street, which is larger than the one above No 10.

He added that Mr Johnson "stopped speaking to me about the matter in 2020", as he told him the renovation plans were "unethical, foolish, possibly illegal and almost certainly broke the rules on proper disclosure of political donations if conducted in the way he intended".

Mr Cummings said he would be "happy to tell the cabinet secretary [Simon Case] or Electoral Commission" what he knew about the matter but that his knowledge is "limited".

The Electoral Commission says it is working to establish whether any of the spending on the flat needs to be examined within its own remit on political donations, and therefore needs to be reported and subsequently published.

In response to Mr Cummings's claims, a No 10 spokesperson said: "At all times, the government and ministers have acted in accordance with the appropriate codes of conduct and electoral law.

"Cabinet Office officials have been engaged and informed throughout and official advice has been followed.

"All reportable donations are transparently declared and published - either by the Electoral Commission or the House of Commons registrar, in line with the requirements set out in electoral law.

"Gifts and benefits received in a ministerial capacity are, and will continue to be, declared in transparency returns."

On Friday, the government said that "costs of wider refurbishment in this year have been met by the prime minister personally."

'Cronyistic cabal'

Shadow communities secretary Steve Reed told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We're calling for the government to publish any correspondence related to payments or donations around the refurbishment.

"We need to know what the full amount was that was spent and we need to know who paid for the work in the first place that the prime minister now proposes to reimburse."

Former attorney general Mr Grieve said the issue was "just one illustration of the chaos Mr Johnson seems to bring in his wake".

The former MP, who was expelled from the parliamentary party by Mr Johnson in 2019 after rebelling against him in a Brexit vote, also described his government as "a cronyistic cabal".

Lockdown leak

Mr Cummings also denied being the source of a leak ahead of the second coronavirus lockdown in November, which saw details of the plans for new restrictions appear in several newspapers.

In his blog, he said an inquiry at the time found that neither he nor the then-Downing Street director of communications, Lee Cain, had been responsible.

He added that the events around that inquiry "contributed to [his] decision to stick to [his] plan to leave No 10 by 18 December", which he said were "communicated to the prime minister in July".

Mr Cummings also claimed Mr Johnson had considered stopping the inquiry.

He wrote that he recalled a meeting between Mr Johnson and the cabinet secretary at the time, after an inquiry had been launched, at which the cabinet secretary allegedly said "all the evidence definitely leads to Henry Newman and others in that office".

At the time, Mr Newman was a special adviser at the Cabinet Office. He took up a role in Downing Street earlier this year.

Mr Cummings claimed that, in a conversation he had with the PM afterwards, Boris Johnson said: "If Newman is confirmed as the leaker then I will have to fire him, and this will cause me very serious problems with Carrie [Symonds - the PM's fiancee] as they're best friends… [pause] perhaps we could get the cabinet secretary to stop the leak inquiry?"

In response to Mr Cummings' claims, a Downing Street statement said: "The prime minister has never interfered in a government leak inquiry."

And a senior government official said: "The allegations against Henry Newman are entirely false. He wouldn't be working in Downing Street if he was suspected of leaking information."

Dyson row

Mr Cummings also denied leaking text messages between the prime minister and Sir James Dyson, following newspaper reports suggesting this.

He said he was "happy to meet with the cabinet secretary and for him to search my phone for Dyson messages" and "for No 10 to publish every email I received and sent July 2019-November 2020".

Mr Cummings called for an "urgent Parliamentary inquiry into the government's conduct over the Covid crisis", adding that he thought Mr Johnson had fallen "far below" the standards of "competence" the "country deserves".

The text exchange between the prime minister and the businessman occurred in March last year, after the government asked companies to help build thousands of ventilators needed for the pandemic response.

In it, the prime minister agreed to "fix" concerns the businessman had about tax bills for his Singapore-based staff if they moved to the UK to do this.

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2021-04-24 10:06:32Z
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