Partygate news- live: Johnson vows to ‘set record straight’ on scandal as Tory backbench anger grows
Prime minister adds that Rishi Sunak, who was also fined, is safe in his position as chancellor
Boris Johnson has promised to address parliament next week about his fine for breaching Covid laws and “set the record straight in any way that I can” on his previous claims that no rules were broken.
Answering questions following a speech on immigration in Kent, Mr Johnson said that Rishi Sunak - who also faced a £50 fine for attending the prime minister’s lockdown-breaching birthday party in 2020 - was safe in his position as chancellor.
Earlier another back bench Tory MP suggested Mr Johnson should resign over the Partygate scandal, saying the public is “right to expect the highest standards of behaviour from our leaders.
Karen Bradley, a former cabinet minister who represents Staffordshire Moorlands, said: “I will spend the next few days consulting my constituents and will decide on what action to take after listening to them.
“But I do wish to make it clear that if I had been a minister found to have broken the laws that I passed, I would be tendering my resignation now.”
Senior Tory MP says prime minister should hold a vote of confidence if local elections suffer in May
Tobias Ellwood has said Boris Johnson should hold a vote of confidence if the local elections in May go badly for the Conservatives, adding that Vladimir Putin could “exploit” the Prime Minister’s image as a law-breaker following the partygate fines.
Mr Ellwood, a Tory MP who is also chairman of the Commons Defence Committee, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We’d like to see the United Kingdom as a beacon of democracy, an exemplar on the world stage.
“So for me, it’s actually a worrying turning point when we lose sight of those high standards, as ironically they’re being eroded across the world.
“I mean, back to Ukraine, something Putin will no doubt exploit - how can a lawmaker also be a law breaker? This is not a good look.”
Mr Ellwood added: “I think the Prime Minister has made his intentions clear - he wants to stay - but this is this is bigger than the Prime Minister.
“It’s about the reputation of the party for which all colleagues must defend, and I believe he owes it to the parliamentary party, once the reports have concluded and the local elections have allowed the public view to be factored in, to agree to hold his own vote of confidence if those elections go badly.”
Welsh secretary Simon Hart told Sky News that people who get partygate fines should not lose their jobs “automatically”.
He said this morning: “My opinon is, people who get a fixed penalty notice should not automatically expect to be sacked at the same time.”
The Tory MP added: “I don’t want to excuse or justify.
“I have to take my fair share of blame for this, we all have to hold our hands up.”
Shadow cabinet minister says prime minister is on a ‘sinking boat'
Labour MP Lucy Powell has said the Government’s announcement to send asylum seekers to Rwanda is “less about dealing with small boats and more about dealing with the Prime Minister’s own sinking boat” as a distraction amid the partygate scandal.
The shadow cabinet minister told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “This is quite obviously a pretty desperate attempt by the Prime Minister to distract from his law-breaking and I don’t think there would be many of your listeners that wouldn’t take it with a large dose of scepticism.
“It’s a plan that might sound good in a focus group and would certainly grab the headlines because it’s very controversial and contestable - but in reality, it is unworkable, expensive, and unethical.
“It will end up costing us a lot more money in the long run and it won’t deal with the issues of the very, very poor decision-making that is happening in the Home Office.
“It won’t do anything to deal with the fact that we don’t have any return agreements, which is part of the issue in the backlog in the system.
“So I do say again, I think this is less about dealing with small boats and more about dealing with the Prime Minister’s own sinking boat.”
Welsh secretary says there is a difference between ‘misleading and deliberately misleading’ on Partygate
There is a difference between “misleading and deliberately misleading”, the Wales secretary has said.
Simon Hart told Sky News: “We heard all of that with Tony Blair and the Iraq War, if you remember, weapons of mass destruction? And the suggestion was at the time that he had misled Parliament.
“That was the suggestion and the argument was all around whether it was deliberate or whether it was accidental.”
When pressed on the fact the Prime Minister is overseeing 50 breaches of the law being broken, Mr Hart said: “I don’t know where you got 50 from.”
Sky News presenter Kay Burley explained: “Because 50 notices have already been issued. So, 50 times somebody has broken the law in Downing Street.”
Mr Hart replied: “You know more about this than me”, adding: “We can’t speculate about an inquiry which is incomplete.”
Boris Johnson trying to distract from Partygate lawbreaking with Rwanda plan, Tory MP says
Boris Johnson is trying to distract the public from his lockdown law-breaking with an eye-catching announcement on immigration, a senior Conservative MP has said.
The prime minister on Thursday is expected to make a speech on Thursday laying out details of the policy, which will see refugees claiming asylum in Britain flown thousands of miles away to the landlocked African country.
But the timing of the announcement has raised eyebrows, coming just days after the prime minister received his first fine for breaking lockdown rules at a birthday party for himself in Downing Street, our policy correspondent Jon Stone writes.
Boris Johnson trying to distract from Partygate with Rwanda plan, Tory MP says
Select committee chair Tobias Ellwood
Former Lord Chancellor says government ‘couldn’t care about the law'
Former Lord Chancellor Lord Falconer told LBC this morning: “30-50 people receiving fixed penalty notices, including the head of the Covid-19 task force, including the head of ethics and the prime minister- that is an organisation that couldn’t care about the law.
“And it’s that message that should lead him to go and I noticed that’s why the justice minister- the only serious lawyer in the government- has left.”
Johnson ‘to get three more fines'
Boris Johnson could receive three more fines for breaking Covid laws, according to reports.
Government sources told The Guardian the fixed penalty notices could come from events that have not yet been fully investigated by the Met Police.
The Daily Mirror today carries a similar story, which says things are going to get worse for the PM when MPs return from the Easter recess.
ICYMI: Justice minister resigns in response to No 10’s handling of Partygate
Boris Johnson’s battle to remain in power has been hit by the resignation of a justice minister, who warned the scale and nature of breaches of coronavirus rules in Downing Street are inconsistent with the rule of law.
Conservative peer David Wolfson said he had “no option” other than to resign on Wednesday over the “repeated rule-breaking, and breach of the criminal law, in Downing Street”.
Full report below:
Tory peer quits as justice minister over Downing Street partygate breaches
David Wolfson said there had been a ‘breach of the criminal law’ at No 10.
Cabinet minister: It doesn’t matter how many times PM is fined
Boris Johnson should stay on as prime minister regardless of how many times he is fined for breaking Covid laws, a cabinet minister has said.
Simon Hart, the Wales secretary, said "the principle is the same if it's one or five" when asked how many party fines would be “too many”.
"For me, it doesn't make a difference," he told LBC. "Others will take a different view."
Mr Hart is out on the broadcast round this morning defending Mr Johnson and his response to the Partygate scandal.
More comments from the secretary of state below:
No capable replacements for PM, Rees-Mogg says
There are no cabinet ministers capable of doing a better job as prime minister than Boris Johnson, Jacob Rees-Mogg has said.
The Brexit opportunities minister was responding to calls for Mr Johnson to resign after getting fined for breaking lockdown laws.
Mr Rees-Mogg claimed it is in the "national interest" to have Mr Johnson continue in office amid Russia's war in Ukraine.
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