How Johnson was found to have misled MPs and why 90-day suspension was recommended
The Guardian|June 16, 2023
The House of Commons privileges committee has found that Boris Johnson repeatedly misled MPs when he told them he knew nothing about lockdown-breaking social gatherings in and around Downing Street
Peter Walker
How Johnson was found to have misled MPs and why 90-day suspension was recommended

These are the main points of a highly damning and hugely detailed report.

Key findings on wrongdoing 

Johnson was found to have committed five serious offences:

• Deliberately misleading the Commons when he repeatedly said that either no Covid rules were broken, or that he had been assured none were broken.

• Deliberately misleading the privileges committee when he reiterated the same argument.

• Breaching confidence by leaking part of the report in advance in his letter last Friday when he announced his departure as an MP.

• “Impugning” the committee, and thus parliamentary processes.

• Complicity in a “campaign of abuse and attempted intimidation of the committee”.

The punishment 

If Johnson had not resigned as an MP, the committee would have recommended a 90-day suspension from parliament – extremely long, and well beyond the threshold needed for the constituents in his Uxbridge and South Ruislip seat to have sought a byelection.

The original recommendation was to have been a 20-day suspension, still greater than the 10-day minimum for a possible by-election.

This was increased after Johnson’s letter resigning as an MP on Friday, which revealed parts of the findings and condemned the process as unfair and biased.

The committee has recommended that he should not be given a pass which would have allowed him access to parliament as a former MP, a traditional privilege.

The punishment could have been greater

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