Thursday, April 25, 2024

Partygate: Candidates lined up to replace under-probe British Prime Minister Johnson

The report of the official investigation into possible lockdown breaches could be tendered this weekend and Mr Johnson could be forced out.

• January 29, 2022
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson [Photo Credit: NBC News]

Some candidates are being considered for the British top job in the event of the ouster of Prime Minister Boris Johnson who has been under investigation for allegedly breaching COVID-19 lockdown rules.

The report of the official investigation by senior civil servant Sue Gray into possible lockdown breaches in Downing Street and Whitehall could be tendered as early as this weekend and Mr Johnson could be forced out thereafter.

Among top candidates being touted for the Tory leadership are Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss. They are considered frontrunners to win the top job if the PM is ousted.

But the Daily Mail reported on Friday that centrist Tories are backing ex-soldier Tom Tugendhat to be Mr Johnson’s successor.

The newspaper said some Conservative MPs believe the Foreign Affairs Select Committee chairman represents the “best chance for a fresh start”.

Meanwhile, fresh allegations emerged in regards to a reported get together on Mr Johnson’s birthday in June 2020.

The Telegraph reported on Friday evening that the PM’s wife, Carrie, had sent messages to No 10 staff offering to bring a cake to the gathering.

The publication of the long-awaited Ms Gray report into alleged lockdown-busting parties was thrown into disarray on Tuesday when Metropolitan Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick, who had long resisted calls to investigate, announced her officers had opened a criminal probe.

Scotland Yard confirmed on Friday evening that it had received the material requested from the Cabinet Office to support its investigation.

The force said officers would now examine this “without fear or favour” to establish whether any rules were broken.

The Met had been criticised by legal experts and Tory MPs for urging Gray to limit the publication of her investigation into allegations of lockdown-breaking parties in No 10.

But the force insisted on Friday evening that it had not delayed publication of the report.

Commander Catherine Roper, who leads the Met’s Central Specialist Crime Command, said the timing of the document’s release was a matter for the Cabinet Office.

The PA news agency understands that the Prime Minister could receive a copy of the report over the weekend, or in the coming week.

It is expected it will be sent to No 10 shortly, as opposed to in a matter of weeks or months.

But it is understood that it will comply with any police requests, meaning certain details could be excluded. Downing Street declined to comment on the Met statement.

The Cabinet Office did not offer further comment on when the report would be published.

It said Ms Gray’s investigation continues, there is ongoing contact with the police and the findings will be made public.

The department added that it would not speculate further on the inquiry being carried out by the senior official.

Ms Roper said the force had asked for “minimal reference” to be made in the report to the “relevant events”, in order to “protect the integrity of the police investigation” and be “as fair as possible to those who are subject to it”.

“This will only be necessary until these matters are concluded, and is to give detectives the most reliable picture of what happened at these events.

We intend to complete our investigations promptly, fairly and proportionately,” she said.

“We have not delayed this report and the timing of its release is a matter for the Cabinet Office inquiry team.”

SNP Westminster group leader Ian Blackford tweeted: “No one will accept a Westminster cover-up.

“If the UK government refuses to publish the full unredacted report it will prove, yet again, that Westminster is utterly corrupt and broken beyond repair.

“It won’t save Boris Johnson’s skin. It will only add to the calls for him to go.”

And Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “Anything short of the full report would be a Whitehall whitewash not worth the paper it is written on.”

The Met previously argued the constraints on the Cabinet Office report into “partygate” were necessary to “avoid any prejudice to our investigation”, indicating it faced being watered down or a lengthy delay.

The new statement, issued on Friday evening, contained no mention of the term “prejudice”.

Ms Roper said the offences under investigation, where proven, would normally result in the issuing of a fixed penalty notice.

“Individuals who are identified as having potentially breached these regulations will normally be contacted in writing and invited to explain their actions including whether they feel they had a reasonable excuse,” she said.

“Following this process, and where there is sufficient evidence that individuals have breached the regulations without reasonable excuse, officers will decide if enforcement action is appropriate.

“If the decision is to take enforcement action then a report will be sent to the ACRO Criminal Records Office which will issue the fixed penalty notice. Recipients can pay the fixed penalty and the matter will be considered closed.

“Should a recipient dispute the fixed penalty notice then the case will be referred back to the Met where officers will consider whether to pursue the matter in a magistrates’ court.

“As the Commissioner said, we will not be giving a running commentary but we will continue to update when significant progress is made in the investigative process.”

(PA Media/dpa/NAN)

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

Katsina State

Politics

Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku

“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Katsina gov, Dikko Rada

States

Katsina registers 2,600 intending pilgrims for hajj 2024

Mr Abdullahi-Dankama said the board initiated enlightenment programmes to educate the intending pilgrims.

India flag

World

Remotely piloted aircraft crashes in India’s Rajasthan

A probe has been ordered to determine cause of the crash

FRSC

States

FRSC to sanction one-way drivers on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway

The sector commander said that the vehicles of offenders would be impounded.

NationWide

We pay over 500 retirees in Nigerian universities every month, says NUPEMCO

“I think that has made life easier for the retirees who are enjoying the benefits.’’

Gavel used to illustrate the story

States

Court remands man for alleged armed robbery

The prosecutor said that the complainant’s mobile phones were eventually tracked to the suspect.

Fire (Credit: PM NEWS)

NationWide

Fire breaks out at MMIA, flight operations diverted to D-Wing

Mrs Orah said that efforts to ventilate the smoke from the building were in progress.