Prime Minister Boris Johnson apologised Monday after an inquiry found that Downing Street parties while Britain was in lockdown represented a “serious failure” to observe the standards expected of government or to heed🐲 the sacrifices made by millions of people during the pandemic.
But Johnson brushed off calls to q𝕴uit over the “partygate” scandal, promising to reform the way his office is run and insisting that he and his government can be trusted.
“I get it, and I will fix it,” he said in Parliament after senior civil servant Sue Gray published interim🎉 findings on several gatherings in 2020 and 2021 while the UK was ⛄under government-imposed restrictions to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
Gray found that “failures of leadership and judgmen꧟t” allowed events to occur that “should not have been allowed﷽ to take place”. “The hardship under which citizens across the country worked, lived and sadly even died while observing the government's regulations and guidance rigorously are known only too well,” Gray wrote.
“Against the backdrop of the pandemic, when the government was asking citizens to a💃ccept far-reaching restrictions on their lives, some of the behaviour surrounding these gatherings is difficult to justify💧,” she added.
Gray's glimpse inside a 10 Downing St marked by excessive alcohol consumption and staff ♚afraid to spe꧃ak out about workplace problems are a blow to Johnson, despite the fact that Gray's conclusions relate to just four of the 16 events she investigated.
Her findings on 12 others have been withheld at the request of the police, who last week launched a criminal🐬 investigation into the most serious alleged breaches🐻 of coronavirus rules. The Metropolitan Police force said it had asked for cuts to Gray's report "to avoid any prejudice to our investigation”.
The force said Monday that it would be interviewing party attendees and looking at mo🔯re th♍an 300 photos and over 500 pages of documents it had received from Gray's team. Anyone found guilty, including the prime minister, could face a fine.
Among the events under police investigation are a June 2020 birthday party for Johnson in Downing Street and two gaౠtherings held on the eve of Prince Philip's funeral in April 2021 — a funeral at which the widowed Queen Elizabeth II had to sit alone.
The allegations that the prime minister and his staff flouted restrictions imposed on the country to curb the spread of the coronavirus🥃 — holding “bring your own booze” office parties, birthday celebrations and “wine time Fridays” — have caused public anger, led some Conservative lawmakers to call for Johnson's resignation⭕ and triggered intense infighting inside the governing party.
Opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer said the British public had made “heart-wrenching sacrifices” and endured “a collective trauma” during th🦩e pandemic.
“The prime minister took us all for fools,” he said. “He held people's sacr♔ifice in contempt. He showed himself unfit for office.”
Johnson c🌠an ignore opposition criticism, because the Conservatives have a large majority in Parliament. His fate rests on how Conservative lawmakers respond to his apology. Some previously said they would push for a no-confidence vote if Gray found Johnson was at serious fault or had misled Parliament with his previous insistence th𓆏at no rules had been broken.
Johnson urged his critics ﷽to wait for the conclusions of 🍨the police investigation.
But one Conservative legislator, Andrew Mitchell, said in the ꦺHouse of Commons that Johnson “no longer has my ꦇsupport”.
Another, Aaron Bell, 🗹recalled attending his grandmother's small, socially distanced funeral in May 2020 and asked: “Does the prime minister think I'm a fool?”
Former Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May said that either Johnson and those around him “had not read the rules, or didn't understand what they meant. …𓄧 Or they didn't think the rules applied to them. Which was it?”
Gray did not criti🐟cise the prime minister directly, but said “there is significant learning to be drawn from these events which must be addressed immediately across government”🌌.
That is unlikely to satisfy many of Johnson's 𝄹crit🤪ics, some of whom accused the government of an attempted cover-up.
“This whole thing is a whitewash, there is no intent for anyone to tell the truth or be held🃏 accountable,” said David Garfinkel, a member of the group COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice. “We have a prime minister who lies, who lies about lies and he is utterly insincere and incapable of leading."
The government initially refused to promise that it would publisꦬh Gray's full findings once the police investigation is finished. But after pressure from Conservative lawmakers, Johns⛦on's office committed to publishing her updated report.
Johnson, meanwhile, sought to change the subject 💟from his personal woes, marking the second anniversary of Brexit on Monday by touting economic opportunities outside the European Union.
The UK officially left the now 27-nation bloc oꦫn Jan 31, 2020, though it remained part of the EU's economic structures for anot🌸her 11 months.
Johnson announced a “Brexit Freedoms” Bill that the government says will slash red tape for British businesses by amending laws that were carried over from the UK's yea꧟rs as an EU member.
Johnson also plans a diplomatic push to try to ease tensions between Russia and Ukraine. He is expected to speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin by phꦇone later Monday or Tuesday and to visit Ukraine on Tuesday as part of efforts to deter Russia from invading its neighbour.
Some political observers said Gray's circumscribed and partial report may give Joh♊nson at least a temporary reprieve from calls for his ouster.
“It's too soon💝 to tell🐻,” said Alex Thomas, program director at the Institute for Government think-tank.
“It avoided some of the most damaging outcomes that we might have expected...But in a way the more you read it, the more you lo♌ok at the descriptions of the culture and the failings of leadership, the more da🥀maging it was.”