Boris Johnson’s future has been handed over to the police – again – after the Cabinet Office found new evidence of more alleged lockdown-breaking.
Friends of the former prime minister, 58, reportedly visited Chequers between June 2020 and May 2021, The Times reported today.
The Cabinet Office is funding legal advice for Johnson as part of a probe into his government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
Citing two government sources, The Times said that Johnson’s lawyers stumbled on ‘details of visitors to Chequers’ in his ministerial diary that raised red flags.
The alleged get-togethers in Chequers, an official country residence for prime ministers, were ‘clearly a breach of the rules’, a senior source told the newspaper.
He and his wife, Carrie, stayed at Chequers during the first lockdown when shelter-in-place rules closed people’s front doors shut and shuttered businesses.
Johnson’s legal team decided they were duty-bound to raise the potential breaches of lockdown rules to the Cabinet Office, according to The Times.
The Cabinet Office, under the terms of the civil service code, should ‘report evidence of criminal or unlawful activity’ to the authorities.
The claims have been passed on to Thames Valley Police and London’s Metropolitan Police Service.
A Cabinet Office spokesman said: ‘Information came to light during the process of preparing evidence for submission to the Covid inquiry.
‘It was identified as part of the normal disclosure review of potentially relevant documents being undertaken by the legal team for inquiry witnesses.
‘In line with obligations in the civil service code, this material has been passed to the relevant authorities and it is now a matter for them.’
Thames Valley Police added: ‘On Thursday (May 19) we received a report of potential breaches of the Health Protection Regulations between June 2020 and May 2021 at Chequers, Buckinghamshire.
‘We are currently assessing this information.’
The Met said: ‘We are in receipt of information from the Cabinet Office passed to us on 19 May 2023, which we are currently assessing.
‘It relates to potential breaches of the Health Protection Regulations between June 2020 and May 2021 at Downing Street.’
This new revelation adds to the already chaotic drama that began in November 2021 when The Mirror reported that three social gatherings were held in Downing Street during lockdown.
Fearing his political unravelling, Johnson told Parliament the following month that Number 10 never violated any coronavirus guidelines.
But Sue Gray, a former senior civil servant, saw differently. In a major report, she painted a picture of ‘excessive’ workplace drinking in Downing Street, citing 16 social parties.
Late-night booze-filled parties with wine bottles scattered around and a leaving do with a karaoke machine and even a dust-up between two staffers were among the gatherings flagged by Gray.
Others included a bring-your-own-booze cocktail party in May 2020 and a basement party held one day before Prince Phillip’s funeral in which a swing was broken and a staffer was sent to the Co-op with a suitcase to fetch more booze.
‘There were failures of leadership and judgment by different parts of No. 10 and the Cabinet Office at different times’ she wrote.
‘Some of the events should not have been allowed to take place. Other events should not have been allowed to develop as they did.’
The Metropolitan Police later issued 126 fines relating to eight gatherings in and around Downing Street and Whitehall, some of which Johnson attended.
Johnson was among those fined – for attending his 56th birthday party on June 19 20202 – making him the first PM to ever be found to have broken the law.
But in March this year, he admitted that he had misled the House of Commons but stressed that it was what he believed at the time.
He told Parliament’s privileges committee, which is investigating whether he lied to MPs about violating lockdown rules, he did not do so ‘intentionally or recklessly’.
Johnson said none of his most-trusted aides warned him before or after that the gatherings violated social-distancing restrictions. It is up to the privileges committee to decide whether such rules should have been obvious, regardless of what his staff told him.
The committee has been informed about the entries in Johnson’s diary – Johnson himself was made aware last week and denied wrongdoing.
MPs are expected to publish their potentially make-or-break report on whether the former Tory leader broke lockdown rules next month.
If the committee rules he misled Parliament, Johnson may be suspended.
A ban of 10 days or more could all but extinguish any possibility that he could revive his political career as it would ignite a by-election in his seat.
He has been an MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip in north-west London since 2015 but holds it on the razor-thin majority of 7,210.
A spokesman for the former prime minister said: ‘Some abbreviated entries in Mr Johnson’s official diary were queried by the Cabinet Office during preparation for the Covid Inquiry. Following an examination of the entries, Mr Johnson’s lawyers wrote to the Cabinet Office and privileges committee explaining that the events were lawful and were not breaches of any Covid regulations.’
For Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice, a campaign group consisting of bereaved people, tweeted: ‘These revelations make a grim mockery of Boris Johnson’s claims that he didn’t break his own lockdown rules.
‘His legacy is one of lying, complete contempt for the ordinary people he was supposed to protect, and above all,’ it added, ‘presiding over the deaths of nearly 200,000 people.’
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