Raab, who as justice secretary oversees the legal system, suggested in a BBC interview that the Met’s decision to issue 20 penalties on individuals involved in gatherings showed the law had been broken.
When the prime minister was later questioned by MPs on the backbench liaison committee, he insisted he would not give a “running commentary,” adding: “I just think it would be wrong of me to deviate from that”.
Pressed by Pete Wishart, the SNP MP for Perth and North Perthshire, Johnson said: “I’m going to camp pretty firmly on my position.”
“There will come a point when I will be able to talk about the investigation and the conclusions of the investigation, and that is when the investigation has concluded.”
The prime minister sought to suggest he had tackled some of the problems exposed in the report by the senior civil servant Sue Gray, by changing the leadership structure in No 10. “I have been several times to the House to talk about this and to explain and to apologise and to set out the things that we were doing to change the way things were run in No 10, and we’ve done that,” he said.
This story is from the March 31, 2022 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the March 31, 2022 edition of The Guardian.
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