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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Uproar over Boris Johnson’s ‘drinking party’ amid lockdown

Growing public anger at the gatherings has raised doubts about British PM's authority within his Conservative Party

Reuters London Published 21.12.21, 02:14 AM
Boris Johnson.

Boris Johnson.

Boris Johnson’s deputy issued the latest of a string of denials on Monday that the Prime Minister had broken lockdown rules after a photograph appeared of him and more than a dozen others drinking wine in the garden of his Downing Street residence.

The photograph of the gathering, reportedly taken in May last year, follows reports of other apparent social events during times when his government had told Britons they should not mix with others.

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Growing public anger at the gatherings has raised doubts about Boris’s authority within his Conservative Party as ministers consider new restrictions to control a surge in Covid-19 cases. The party lost a long-held parliamentary seat in a by-election last week.

The picture, published by the Guardian newspaper late on Sunday, shows Boris with his partner Carrie, who appears to be holding their newborn son, and two other people at a table on a terrace in the Downing Street garden with cheese and wine.

Nearby is another table of four other people, and a short distance away are a larger group standing on the grass around a table with bottles of wine. At the time, the government had told the public they could only meet one person in an outdoor public place, keeping two metres apart.

“Downing Street use that garden as a place of work,” deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab told Times Radio. “That’s not against the regulations.”
“It is palpably not a social gathering, because you had people in work suits, following meetings that they were having at work,” Raab said.

The Opposition Labour Party seized on the photograph, calling it further evidence that Boris and his staff did not take the restrictions they had imposed on others seriously.
“Ask yourself, is that a work meeting going on? Or is that a social event? And I think the answer is pretty obvious,” Labour leader Keir Starmer told reporters.

“During that period that were funerals of people where very few people could go and mourn those that had tragically died ... that’s the contrast.”
Raab’s line of defence was swiftly criticised.

“He and the Prime Minister really are laughing at us aren’t they,” said Labour lawmaker and spokesman Bill Esterson. Boris has faced a barrage of criticism since a video emerged showing his staff laughing and joking about a Downing Street party.

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