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New Charges Against Johnson in Participant

New Charges Against Johnson in Participant

A parliamentary inquiry in Britain’s House of Commons has revealed that the former prime minister gave false information about parties held in Downing Street while the rest of the country was under strict lockdown.

The 24-page report included, among other things, witness statements that Johnson said during an event, “this is probably the most socially distanced meeting in the UK right now”.

Another source is an internal pm sent in April 2021, six months before the parties became public knowledge, warning of leaks about the Prime Minister’s “crooked nights”.

“I don’t think there is any need to worry,” says the Prime Minister.

“There is no evidence”

The report was prepared by a group of seven politicians, four of Johnson’s party colleagues in the Conservative Party.

Their task was to investigate whether the Prime Minister was untruthful and, if so, whether it was deliberate. The inquiry released now is not a final report, but should provide guidance to Johnson ahead of a public hearing he will attend at the end of March.

However, it is unclear exactly what punishment he will face if convicted. Had Johnson still been Prime Minister, he would have been forced to resign if he was finally proven to have lied.

A conviction, on the other hand, can block any attempt to become the leader of the party and nation again in the future.

Johnson says the report “absolutely” proves his innocence.

– The interesting thing is that after ten months they have not found anything, not a single evidence, that I would have deliberately violated any rules, he says in the published video. BBC And the sky.

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Gray under a magnifying glass

The report was drawn up in part following an investigation by independent officer Sue Gray last year. His report singled out a lack of leadership and a “culture” of rule-breaking as reasons for parties under strict lockdown.

During Friday, Sue Gray found herself at the center of some controversy. He actually agreed to become Labor leader Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, which led many Conservatives to question his party manifesto and call it biased.

The Prime Minister is said to be Rishi Sunak The Times The Cabinet Office is concerned that Gray is bringing sensitive information from his previous role and colleagues in the Cabinet have urged him to block the transfer for the next two years.