Boris Johnson to publish defence of his behaviour over Partygate
Boris Johnson will publish detailed defence of his behaviour over Partygate as he faces grilling by MPs this week – with blurred photos inside No10 set to form backbone of his case
- The ex-PM is set to argue he received clear advice gatherings were within rules
- He could also question the fairness of the Commons Privileges Committee
Boris Johnson is planning to publish a detailed defence of his behaviour over Partygate before he is grilled by MPs on Wednesday, The Mail on Sunday has learned.
The former Prime Minister has compiled a comprehensive legal case, arguing that he received clear advice at the time that lockdown gatherings in Downing Street were within Covid rules, which will be made public in the coming days.
His defence is also expected to call into question the fairness of the Commons Privileges Committee, which could decide his political fate when it questions him.
Photos of Mr Johnson and Cabinet Secretary Simon Case surrounded by Downing Street staff – the other faces blurred for anonymity – form the core of his defence that he did not intentionally mislead the House over Covid-era parties at No 10.
Sources claim that none of the more than two dozen No 10 staff who have given evidence to the committee – many of them featured in the photographs – have told the MPs that they believed they were breaking the rules.
SPEECH: Official photo of Mr Johnson’s birthday in June 2020. No10 blurred the faces of other staff, except Simon Case
Boris Johnson pictured here at the gathering in No10 on June 19, 2020, with the then-Chancellor Rishi Sunak
Mr Johnson is also likely to argue that the gatherings were held to try to boost morale in No 10 which had been hit by waves of illness and which contributed to a stressful working environment.
A source said: ‘People were dropping like flies. People were working long hours under stressful conditions, and Boris wanted them to stay cheerful and motivated.
‘Those people in the pictures used the same offices and the same bathrooms, opened the same doors, used the same printers, photocopiers and phones and breathed the same air in that unventilated Victorian building for 16 hours a day.
‘The fact that many pictures were taken by [official photographer] Andy Parsons and placed on the No 10 Flickr account shows we didn’t think we had anything to hide.’
Mr Johnson’s defiance underlines the stakes at play this week in his televised public interrogation, which could last for four hours.
The committee, which is made up of four Tories, two Labour MPs and one SNP MP, can recommend a ten-day Commons suspension if it believes he intentionally misled MPs – a sanction that could lead to a by-election in his Uxbridge and South Ruislip seat.
Last night, sources close to the committee hit back at claims from ex-Home Secretary Priti Patel of a ‘culture of collusion’ and lack of objectivity after negative comments made by members about Mr Johnson.
One source said that talk of collusion was ‘absolute b******s’ and dismissed any suggestion that the committee’s mind was already made up on the ex-PM’s behaviour.
The then-Prime Minister pictured raising a glass in No10 during a gathering to mark the departure of a special advisor on November 13, 2020
The committee hearing coincides with a vote on an aspect of Rishi Sunak’s post-Brexit Northern Ireland deal with the EU, which Mr Johnson’s supporters expect to play into their hands.
A source said: ‘Many of the people who feel Boris was badly treated are annoyed with elements of the deal, and it is going to fuel the rebellion.’
There is anger among Mr Johnson’s allies over Mr Sunak’s decision to allow his party a free vote on the results of the committee’s investigation.
One senior Tory said: ‘If the PM is not willing to support his predecessor who is up before a kangaroo court, that’s serious.’
Mr Johnson’s allies also believe that the row over Partygate investigator Sue Gray accepting a senior job with Labour boosts his chances of successfully arguing that he has been the victim of a ‘stitch-up’.
However, the committee said its initial report this month was ‘not based on the Sue Gray report’ but on other evidence including material supplied by the Government.
Mr Johnson’s spokesman said: ‘The committee will vindicate Boris Johnson. The evidence will show Boris Johnson did not knowingly mislead Parliament.’
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