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Boris Johnson news – live: Senior Tory says PM unfit for office after Partygate fine

He called Mr Johnson’s apology ‘indefensible’

Sam Hancock,Emily Atkinson
Tuesday 19 April 2022 17:52 BST
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PM no longer worthy.mp4

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Mark Harper, senior Conservative MP for the Forest of Dean, has said he believes Boris Johnson is “no longer worthy of the great office that he holds”.

It followed the PM’s address to the House of Commons in his first statement to MPs since he was fined by the Metropolitan Police for attending a birthday party – thrown in his honour – at No 10 while strict Covid restrictions were in place.

Mr Harper said: “I strongly support the government’s actions in standing up to Putin’s aggression and helping Ukraine defend itself and our values and it’s exactly at times like this that our country needs a Prime Minister who exemplifies those values.

“I regret to say that we have a Prime Minister who broke the laws that he told the country they had to follow, hasn’t been straightforward about it and is now going to ask the decent men and women on these benches to defend what I think is indefensible.

“I’m very sorry to have to say this, but I no longer think he is worthy of the great office that he holds.”

Watch: Jacob Rees-Mogg's comments about British concentration camps in Africa resurface

Jacob Rees-Mogg's comments about British concentration camps in Africa resurface
Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 13:20

PM urges ministers to encourage officials back to Whitehall offices

Boris Johnson is urging minsiters to return the number of officials working in Whitehall to pre-pandemic levels.

“Clearly the prime minister feels that it is important that we make best use of taxpayer-funded departments which are not returning, currently, to the levels we saw before the pandemic,” his spokesperson said.

“This is not simply just about value-for-money for taxpayer-funded buildings, but also it’s a benefit to the staff - particularly junior staff who benefit from face-to-face working - and obviously we know there are benefits that can help, therefore, delivery for the public as well.

“So, it’s right that we continue to push for a return to pre-pandemic levels.”

The spokesman acknowledged there was not enough desk space for all civil servants to be in the office permanently.

“We do want to see the buildings being used at full occupancy,” the spokesman said.

Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 13:13

Tory and Brexit supporters back far-right Marine Le Pen to become French president, poll reveals

Conservative and Brexit supporters want the far-right candidate Marine Le Pen to become president of France in this weekend’s election, a poll shows.

The National Rally (RN) – formerly National Front – leader is backed by 37 per cent of Tory voters at the last election, while just 24 per cent support the centrist Emmanuel Macron, writes our deputy political editor Rob Merrick.

The margin is even greater among Leave voters at the 2016 Brexit referendum, who prefer Ms Le Pen over the current president by 35 per cent to 19 per cent.

The two will go head-to-head in a critical run-off on Sunday, with polls putting Mr Macron as little as six points ahead of his rival.

Tory and Brexit voters back far-right Marine Le Pen to become French president

Conservative voters want National Rally candidate to defeat Emmanuel Macron by 13-point margin

Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 13:05

UK to seek out alternative energy and defence supply options for countries reliant on Russia

The PM is looking to provide countries like India with alternative sources for their energy supplies and defence equipment in a bid to break the Russian monopoly, No 10 has said.

Boris Johnson’s official spokesperson said the Cabinet were briefed on the matter, which he hopes to set in motion with the help of other Western allies, ahead of his imminent visit to India to meet prime minister Narendra Modi.

“When it comes to India and other democratically-elected countries we think the best approach is to engage with them constructively, to try to broaden the alliance of democratic states against Russia,” the spokesman said.

“We want to provide alternative options to countries which are perhaps more dependent on energy and security. That is the approach we think will be most effective.

“We do not think that pointing fingers or shouting from the sidelines are effective ways of engaging with democratically-elected countries.”

(REUTERS)
Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 12:57

War in Ukraine entering ‘attritional’ phase, Cabinet told

The war in Ukraine has entered an “attritional” phase which could span several months, ministers have been warned.

At this morning’s weekly meeting of the Cabinet, the prime minsiter told those present that Ukraine still holds a “perilous” position, while president Putin has been “angered by defeats but determined to claim some sort of victory regardless of the human cost”.

Boris Johnson’s spokesperson said they were also briefed by a senior national security official, who said that Moscow would aim to exploit its troop number advantage but “Ukraine had already shown that this was unlikely to be decisive on its own”.

He said there were some signs that Russia had not learned lessons from previous setbacks in northern Ukraine and there was evidence of troops being committed in a piecemeal fashion.

Reports of poor Russian morale were also relayed to ministers, “with claims of some Russian troops and even units refusing to fight”, he added.

Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 12:43

Government whips call for mass meeting of Tory backbenchers

A mass meeting of Tory backbenchers has been called for 8pm tonight in the Commons, reports The Telegraph’s political editor.

The gathering will follow the the prime minister’s address to MPs, expected to take place at around 3.30pm this afternoon.

Emily Atkinson19 April 2022 12:27

Watch: PM has ‘consistently made the right decisions’, minister claims

Boris Johnson has 'consistently made the right decisions', cabinet minister claims
Sam Hancock19 April 2022 12:17

Deadline for 5 May election postal vote application to expire soon

There has been lots of conversation today around the UK’s local elections - taking place on 5 May - amid suggestions some Tories may use the party’s performance to decide if they will back Boris Johnson through the ongoing Partygate saga.

People wanting to vote by post in the elections have been warned today they only have a few hours left to apply.

Contests are being held on 5 May in each of the four nations, with every council seat in Scotland, Wales, London and many parts of England up for grabs, along with the election of a new Northern Ireland assembly.

It is too late to register to vote, but people in England, Wales and Scotland still have a few hours to apply for a postal vote ahead of the deadline at 5pm on 19 April. The deadline in Northern Ireland has already passed.

Postal votes are available to anyone eligible to vote in the 5 May elections who knows they will not be able to get to a polling station in person.

An application form to apply for a postal vote can be downloaded from the Electoral Commission website.

Most of the seats up for election were last contested in 2018, when the UK was still part of the EU, the PM was Theresa May, Labour was led by Jeremy Corbyn and the Liberal Democrat leader was Vince Cable.

Safe to say, a lot has changed.

Sam Hancock19 April 2022 12:16

MPs ‘likely to vote on referring Johnson to privileges committee’ - report

It is looking increasingly likely that MPs could get the opportunity to vote on whether to refer Boris Johnson to the Commons privileges committee, to investigate if he misled parliament over Partygate, reports suggest.

“Tories likely to treat it as confidence matter and whip MPs - meaning plan is doomed - but bet your bottom dollar Opposition parties will be printing leaflets plastered with pics of Tory MPs they say are backing PM over Partygate row,” the Daily Mirror’s Pippa Crerar tweeted.

It comes after Labour’s Emily Thornberry on Tuesday implored Tory MPs to “vote the right way” if such a situation arose.

Echoing Ms Crerar’s assessment that the Conservative majority means the move will likely fail, Ms Thornberry, the shadow attorney general, said earlier: “Unless Conservative MPs can look at their consciences and vote the right way, we are not going to get the sort of result that we should get.”

Sam Hancock19 April 2022 11:53

Unions hit out at ‘vindictive’ govt push to get civil servants back into offices

Stepping away from Partygate, unions have hit out at the government after its efficiency minister, Jacob Rees-Mogg, called for the “rapid return” of civil servants to their Whitehall desks.

In a letter to cabinet ministers, Mr Rees-Mogg said they needed to issue a “clear message” to their departments that with the end of Covid restrictions in England, officials should be back in the office.

He argued that ending working from home would bring the benefits of “face-to-face, collaborative working” as well as delivering wider benefits for the economy.

With up to three-quarters of staff still reportedly working from home, Mr Rees-Mogg accompanied his letter with a league table showing how many staff in each government department were attending the office on an average day. A Whitehall source was quoted by The Telegraph as saying there was a minority of “hard-working officials” who were in the office “all the time” while “a silent majority of people aren’t pulling their weight”.

Rees-Mogg wants officials to return to their offices in Whitehall to avoid taxpayer-funded spaces sitting mostly empty
Rees-Mogg wants officials to return to their offices in Whitehall to avoid taxpayer-funded spaces sitting mostly empty (PA)

But the move was branded “vindictive” by Dave Penman, the general secretary of the FDA, which represents senior civil servants, who said ministers were out of step with practice in the private sector. He said:

“There is no rationale for this. Ministers can’t point to productivity losses, which is why it’s always anonymous sources making the insulting accusations. Ministers’ obsession with ending flexible working and micro-managing the Civil Service increasingly just looks vindictive.”

A government spokesman said of the situation: “Ministers have been clear that departments should make maximum use of office space and progress is being monitored.”

Sam Hancock19 April 2022 11:43

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