Angry Britons today raged at how they could only see loved ones through care home windows while Boris Johnson and his staff enjoyed cheese and wine in the Downing Street garden.
At the time – Friday May 15, 2020 – only two people were allowed to socialise outside while socially distanced.
Downing Street has insisted it was not a social event, instead claiming staff were working in the garden in the afternoon and evening.
Today, Dominic Raab said the photo did not show a social occasion but people ‘having a drink after a busy set of work meetings’ – adding that the fact attendees were ‘all in suits, or predominately in formal attire’ backed this up.
In one interview, he incorrectly claimed that the PM had hosted a press conference that day, when in fact it was Health Secretary Matt Hancock.
But the picture, obtained by The Guardian, raises serious questions over the assertion that this was merely a work event. It shows three groups of people – including Boris and his then-fiancée Carrie – with bottles of wine and alcohol on their tables.
The image sparked fresh anger among the public, who have now told of the sacrifices they were making to abide by lockdown restrictions on the same date.
Stephen Laughton revealed he could not see his dying mother because it was ‘against the rules’. He said: ‘On the left is the last photo I have of my mum alive in May 2020. Living alone with serious illness, she faced the pandemic with stoicism.
‘We went for a walk around her local park. When she suggested sitting 2m apart in her garden, I said: better not, it’s against the rules.’
Dr Ajay Verma, a gastroenterologist, recalled holding a minute’s silence in a hospital ward in memory of those who had lost their lives in the pandemic.
He said: ‘On Friday 15th May 2020 at 1pm we held a minute’s silence on our ward (and throughout our hospital) in memory of those who died from Covid – little did we know that the PM & friends were enjoying a garden party that same afternoon.’
The picture was plastered across the front page of the Guardian newspaper on Monday morning. Pictured on the right is Boris and Carrie, apparently holding their newborn baby, Wilf
The image sparked fresh anger among the public, who have now told of the sacrifices they were making to abide by lockdown restrictions on the same date
Dr Ajay Verma, a gastroenterologist, recalled holding a minute’s silence in a hospital ward in memory of those who had lost their lives in the pandemic
An NHS worker shared this image of the marks left by PPE on her face while working in a hospital during the same month the gathering took place
One Twitter user posted this image of her son seeing his grandmother through the windows of her care home
Police officers in a patrol car move sunbathers on in Greenwich Park, London, using a megaphone. This image was taken on May 15 – the same day as the gathering
Two body boarders being stopped by police before entering the water in Wales on May 9
In other coronavirus developments –
- The operator of the Real Greek and Franco Manca restaurant chains has urged Chancellor Rishi Sunak to announce further support for businesses ‘in the next 24 hours’.
- Labour shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said that businesses need more support to get them through the difficult months ahead.
- Patricia Marquis, England director at the Royal College of Nursing, said it is looking like a ‘very bleak picture’ for nursing staff over the next few weeks.
- Professor Carl Heneghan, director of evidence-based medicine at Oxford University and a GP, said ‘we are in deep, deep trouble of potentially talking ourselves into annual lockdowns’.
- Mr Raab said 12 people have now died with the Omicron variant but could not say how many of those were vaccinated.
Today hundreds of people took to social media to rage about the latest apparent breach of Covid protocols by No10 staffers.
A lung oncology cancer nurse specialist said: ‘This was me in May 2020 – exhausted, emotionally and physically spent.
‘I don’t have words for how I feel looking at Boris and his cheese and wine party that was going on at the same time. Seriously what does it take to get the Tories out?!’
A mother also shared a picture of her son having to speak to his grandmother through a window because the restrictions just a day prior to the picture of the Downing Street garden.
She said: ‘May the 14th 2020. My Son seeing his nanny through a window, whilst before he saw her for cuddles every day. Broke my heart. Heart is angry now.’
Pictures also showed police driving through a Greenwich Park in south London using a megaphone to address small groups having picnics in the sun on May 9.
Officers were also photographed stopping two body boarders from entering the sea on the same day as Downing Street staff enjoyed cheese and wine.
Westminster tube station was also eerily empty on May 15 as the vast majority of commuters worked from home.
On May 10, five days before the picture, the Prime Minister addressed the nation from Downing Street and praised those that had ‘shown the good sense to support those rules overwhelmingly’.
He also described the ‘tragic’ death toll and the ‘immense suffering’ the country was having to endure.
A day after the garden meeting, an anti-lockdown demonstration took place in London’s Hyde Park.
Piers Corbyn was among 19 people arrested at the protest as hundreds gathered holding placards and banners including slogans like ‘freedom over fear’.
Dozens of police officers, including some on horseback, were patrolling the protest and issued a further 10 individuals with fines for not complying with lockdown restrictions.
Metropolitan Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor said the protestors were in clear breach of the guidance, putting themselves and others at risk of infection’.
Those that were sticking to the Government imposed restrictions spoke of having to go more than a year without having human contact with their families.
Another Twitter user posted a picture of themselves in full personal protective equipment, recalling how they had to sleep in the garage to avoid putting their family at risk of contracting Covid.
They said: ‘This was me in May 2020, in the endless cycle of door-car-work-car-door, “don’t touch daddy ’till I changed and showered”.’
‘After possible contamination I slept in my garage to protect my family. Over a year later I would learn the Tories were laughing at us all…#cheeseandwine’
May 2020 was also the height of virtual quizzes, with friends and families forced to socialise over Zoom due to restrictions preventing the mixing of households.
Labour Councillor for Bilborough in Nottingham, tweeted a picture of herself drinking with friends remotely after a ‘gruelling day’.
She said: ‘Picture May 2020. This is what socialising after a gruelling day looked like for those of us who followed the rules last May.
‘We all had hard days in lockdown, none more so than the key workers we clapped for, but cheese and wine for 17 was NOT allowed.’
Laura Smith shared a picture of her son seeing his grandfather for the first time after ‘months of lockdown’, but added the pair sat two metres apart and did not embrace, believing they were ‘doing the right thing’.
Similarly, Kevin Pryce shared a picture visiting his father-in-law through a care home window, describing the luck his relative had in living in a ground floor room.
Another Twitter posted a picture of a closed off play area in her local estate, with children unable to use basic equipment like swings and slides during lockdown.
Today, Dominic Raab said the photo did not show a social occasion but people ‘having a drink after a busy set of work meetings’ – adding that the fact attendees were ‘all in suits, or predominately in formal attire’ backed this up.
In one interview, he incorrectly claimed that the PM had hosted a press conference that day, when in fact it was Health Secretary Matt Hancock.
He told Times Radio: ‘Downing Street used that garden as a place of work. They used it for work meetings. The photo is from a day when, I think, the Prime Minister had just done a press conference. And sometimes they’ll have a drink after a long day or a long week. And that’s not against the regulations.’
Twitter users have shared pictures comparing what they were doing on the same day as an apparent social gathering at Downing Street
In an interview today, Dominic Raab incorrectly claimed that the PM had hosted a press conference on May 15 – the day of the gathering – when in fact it was held by Health Secretary Matt Hancock (pictured at the event)
On Friday, No10 denied claims a social event involving wine, spirits and pizza had taken place both inside and outside Downing Street on May 15. Instead a spokesman said Mr Johnson ‘held a series of meetings throughout the afternoon’, including in the garden.
But the new picture, obtained by The Guardian, raises serious questions over the assertion that this was merely a work event. It shows three groups of people – including Boris and his then-fiancée Carrie – with bottles of wine and alcohol on their tables.
Asked why Carrie, was at the event, Mr Raab said: ‘It is not just a place of work for all the staff that work in Number 10 and the Prime Minister, but it is also the the residence of the Prime Minister and his very young family.
‘I genuinely don’t think it gets classified as a party because Carrie popped down and spent a little bit of time there with her husband.’
Mr Raab told Sky News that the garden was ‘used for work’, adding: ‘They’re all in suits, predominantly in formal attire.’ When questioned over this by presenter Kay Burley, he said: ‘I think a large number of them… to be honest with you… the Prime Minister in a suit, the officials there… Some of them have taken their jackets off.’
When asked on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme whether he believed ‘someone or some group’ was ‘dripping out leaks to bring Boris Johnson down’, Mr Raab said ‘it’s certainly being done with an animus’ but added he was against ‘speculating on these things’.
In May last year, the UK was in lockdown whereby only two people from different households were allowed to meet outside – and they must be at a distance of two metres. Today’s revelation heaps further pressure on PM, who 51 per cent of Conservative voters in 2019 now regard as dishonest.
Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves today said a description of the photo as a work meeting ‘defies all sense of reasonableness’.
Ms Reeves told Good Morning Britain: ‘Last year, the Government were partying, this year the Government’s hiding. We need leadership from this Government and that is desperately lacking today. This is a Government who set the rules for everybody else and yet think they don’t apply for them. It is not acceptable.’
Asked if she thinks Mr Johnson should step down, she said: ‘I think it is really difficult for the Prime Minister to set rules now and expect other people to follow them.
‘(It) is just so clear on multiple occasions now that him and his ministers don’t stick by the very rules that they are requiring the rest of us to stick by … I think, frankly, a lot of us are just sick of it.’
Meanwhile, Labour leader Keir Starmer said ‘serious questions’ need to be answered.
He told Sky News: ‘Everybody will have looked at that photograph and to suggest that that is a work meeting is a bit of a stretch by anybody’s analysis. I think there are very serious questions to be answered, but just look at the photo and ask yourself: is that a work meeting going on or is that a social event? I think the answer is pretty obvious.’
Liberal Democrat MP Sarah Olney (Richmond Park) said it ‘mind boggling for Raab to claim this was a necessary meeting’, adding: ‘Yet again the Conservative party is taking the public for fools. The evidence is staring us all in the face. It is scary to think Dominic Raab is supposed to run our justice system when he can’t even see blatant wrongdoing in a photo.’
Jo Goodman, co-founder of Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice, insisted it is ‘exhausting’ for everyone across the country ‘who sacrificed so much to see the constant, flagrant disregard we have all been held in’.
She added: ‘We’re not sure how much more the Prime Minister expects us to take before he’ll accept that he has to be open with the public about these events.
‘This supposed work meeting, with no pen, paper or laptop in sight, instead replaced with vital cheese and wine, shows that he presided over a culture of believing that the rules applied only to other people since early in the pandemic.’
Angela Rayner, the deputy leader of the Labour party, said that the photograph was ‘a slap in the face of the British public’.
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Rayner added: ‘The prime minister consistently shows us he has no regard for the rules he puts in place for the rest of us. Alleged drinking and partying late into the evening [at No 10] when the rest of us were only recently getting one daily walk.’
It is the latest in a ‘partygate’ row over celebrations inside No 10, with Downing Street accused of holding four parties that broke Covid restrictions last year.
Mr Johnson was forced to order a civil service enquiry, but the civil servant he chose to lead the injuiry quit after it emerged a quiz was held in his own department that he was aware of and spoke at.
The Prime Minister suffered another hammer blow yesterday after his ally Lord Frost dramatically quit as Brexit Minister slating Covid curbs and high taxes.
Lord Frost, up to now a close ally of Mr Johnson, walked out with a parting shot at the ‘direction of travel’ and saying he had hoped the end of lockdown would be ‘irreversible’.
In the new image, Boris and Carrie Johnson are seen sitting at a table with a cheeseboard and wine with two people – believed to be a civil servant and an aide.
On the same day, the then Health Secretary Matt Hancock had held a press conference urging the British public to stick to the Covid rules and not to socialise in groups outside.
While people were allowed to return to work at the time, guidance said social distances of two metres must be followed at all times and ‘only absolutely necessary participants should attend meetings and should maintain 2-metre separation throughout’.
A Downing Street spokesperson said on Sunday: ‘As we said last week, work meetings often take place in the Downing Street garden in the summer months. On this occasion there were staff meetings after a No 10 press conference.
‘Downing Street is the prime minister’s home as well as his workplace. The prime minister’s wife lives in No 10 and therefore also legitimately uses the garden.’
The Johnsons were seen in the No10 garden at a table of cheese and wine with up to 17 people nearby during lockdown when only two people were allowed to socialise outside. They are seen together in October
Whitehall heavy hitter Sue Gray (right) has been installed in Simon Case’s (left) place to carry out inquiries into three alleged gatherings at No10 and the Department for Education in November and December last year, when indoor mixing was banned
The number of confirmed cases of Omicron in England increased by 69 per cent on the previous day’s total – up 9,427 to 23,168, figures from the UKHSA showed today
Meanwhile, Tory backbencher Brendan Clarke-Smith told MailOnline: ‘I can understand why people would want to investigate whether actual proper parties took place, but I think they are scraping the barrel a bit now.
‘I’d put it on par with people reporting their neighbours for going out for a walk for too long, going to the supermarket twice or somebody being photographed only 1.8 metres rather than 2 metres away from others.
‘They seem to forget that Number 10 is a workplace and they were also the first people to turn a blind eye to the violent BLM clashes and what went on in Hyde Park.
‘I think most people see this as overreaching and they are more bothered about the here and now.
‘The message I get on the doorstep is that people want to be able to get on with their lives, rather than living under the constant threat of restrictions.’
Downing Street has now been accused of holding five parties over lockdown, including a quiz attended by dozens of staff and which the Prime Minister helped to host on December 15 – three days before another Christmas party which is being investigated.
No10 previously insisted that Downing Street were ‘often required to be in the office to work on the pandemic response’ during the various lockdowns, and therefore ‘those who were in the office for work may have attended virtually from their desks’.
But the Mirror said a message sent by No10’s head of HR on the night of the quiz advised that those who had stayed behind to take part ‘go out the back’ when they left.
Mr Johnson said an inquiry would be held to investigate the allegations. But Cabinet Secretary Simon Case quit his role leading the inquiry into a number of alleged gatherings on Friday, after it emerged a quiz was held in his own department that he was aware of and spoke at.
MailOnline understands that one event was held on December 17 last year, with an email sent out to around 15 people in Mr Case’s Private Office titled ‘Christmas Quiz’.
Whitehall heavy hitter Sue Gray has been installed in his place to carry out inquiries into three alleged gatherings at Downing Street and the Department for Education in November and December last year, when indoor mixing was banned.
The terms of what was then Mr Case’s investigation said it could be widened to include any relevant allegations.
Ex-No 10 chief of staff Gavin Barwell said he ‘can’t think from his time in government of a better person to put in charge of this review than Sue Gray.’
Meanwhile, Chris Bryant, chair of the Committee on Standards, said it appeared that no-one knew what was going on in Downing Street.
The Labour MP told BBC Breakfast the situation over the parties in Whitehall was ‘farcical’ and he said: ‘It feels a bit like Downing Street is completely dysfunctional. Nobody seems to know what’s going on.’
And Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner said Ms Gray now has the task of restoring public trust.
Ms Gray, who is second permanent secretary at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, was once described by BBC Newsnight’s then policy editor as ‘the most powerful person you’ve never heard of’.
Speaking to that same programme on Friday, Tory MP Richard Holden described her as ‘formidable’ and said she was ‘not a pushover’.
She oversaw the Plebgate inquiry in 2012 after ex-chief whip Andrew Mitchell was accused of calling a policeman a ‘pleb’ at the Downing Street gates, and was once described as ‘deputy God’ by then Labour MP Paul Flynn in a meeting the same year.
A Downing Street spokesman said in a statement: ‘To ensure the ongoing investigation retains public confidence the Cabinet Secretary has recused himself for the remainder of the process.
‘The work will be concluded by Sue Gray, second permanent secretary at the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.
‘She will ascertain the facts and present her findings to the Prime Minister.’
Sources admitted that alcohol was consumed at desks with about six people present, and others participating virtually, but there was apparently no catering.
Covid hospital admissions have spiked by more than a third in a week in Britain’s Omicron hotspot of London, official data shows
Congestion levels in London today dropped to 21 per cent, according to TomTom. Congestion data for the morning rush-hour on a working weekday in the capital has not been lower since January 8
Lord Barwell told BBC Radio 4’s Today: ‘I can’t think from my time in government of a better person to put in charge of this review than Sue Gray.
‘She had the role in charge of propriety and ethics in government when I was chief of staff. I saw her handle a number of investigations in a way that was completely independent and her determination always to get to the truth and present the Prime Minister with all the evidence.
‘So for those of your listeners who don’t know who this person is, let me just give you my testimony that I think she is exactly the right kind of person and we can be confident that we will get the facts.’
Mr Bryant also said he had been impressed by Sue Gray, who was now leading the investigation, when he met her.
He urged her to hand any evidence she found of lawbreaking over to the police.
He added: ‘If the rules are broken … if they were broken in any other line of work, the police would be investigating and I don’t know why the police aren’t investigating this situation.’
He said: ‘In the end, the final analysis has to be done by (a) completely independent person. I think that that should be the police.’
And Ms Rayner said: ‘At the moment, people are saying ‘which department didn’t have a party?”
She added: ‘It’s incredibly disappointing because we all know what was happening when these parties were going on, people couldn’t see their loved ones who were dying, and were making incredible sacrifices.
‘So I do think that the investigation has to get to the bottom, but I think that the evidence already is showing that Boris Johnson has set a tone for this government and has allowed this to happen under his watch.’
She said Ms Gray should hand over any evidence of law-breaking which she uncovers to the police.
Ms Gray was previously director-general of propriety and ethics in the Cabinet Office from 2012 to 2018, and is seen as a figure who would not pull any punches in an inquiry.
Former Tory MP and Cabinet office minister Oliver Letwin is reported to have said of Ms Gray: ‘It took me precisely two years before I realised who it is that runs Britain. Our great United Kingdom is actually entirely run by a lady called Sue Gray, the head of ethics or something in the Cabinet Office. Unless she agrees, things just don’t happen.’
She is also part of the panel deciding on who will be next chair of the media regulator Ofcom.
However, the SNP’s Westminster leader, Ian Blackford, said ‘having somebody else from the Civil Service marking their own isn’t good enough’.
Mr Blackford told the BBC’s Newsnight programme that ‘it needs to be someone from authority from outwith Government, from outwith the Civil Service. I would suggest that the best way to do that would be by having a judge-led inquiry’.
Ms Gray was brought in after the Guido Fawkes website reported on Friday that two Christmas parties were held in Mr Case’s department, the Cabinet Office, in December 2020, when restrictions were in place.
Although Mr Case did not take part he was ‘aware of what they were doing’ just outside his own personal office, and at one point stopped to ‘thank them for their hard work’ as he moved between meetings.
A second event last December allegedly featured drinks for a group of people in Mr Case’s office before attendees continued the party elsewhere. However, the Cabinet Office denies that event took place.
The allegations surfaced as Tory chairman Oliver Dowden insisted that Mr Case’s inquiry will ‘vindicate’ Mr Johnson’s position that no rules had been broken.
He has been looking into alleged No10 Christmas party on December 18, as well as leaving dos and a Cabinet Office quiz.
Boris Johnson ordered Mr Case to investigate last week after extraordinary footage emerged of his former press secretary Allegra Stratton and No10 aides giggling about a ‘party’ that was held in Downing Street last year.
The findings of Mr Case’s probe were expected by today, but they have been pushed back.
The damaging scandal has been blamed for the Tories’ disastrous loss in the North Shropshire by-election overnight.
Speaking to reporters on a visit in his Uxbridge constituency today, Mr Johnson insisted the public was more interested in other matters such as coronavirus, and suggested the media reporting on lockdown-busting parties had caused the Tories to lose the North Shropshire by-election.
He told broadcasters ‘what people have been hearing is just a constant litany of stuff about politics and politicians and stuff that isn’t about them’.
Earlier, Scottish National Party’s Westminster leader Ian Blackford called for Mr Case to be removed from the investigation and to resign.
Mr Blackford said: ‘The Prime Minister’s appointed lead investigator into the Downing Street parties has also been reported to have hosted a party in his office – whilst thousands were forced to spend the Christmas season apart as a result of necessary coronavirus restrictions. He, along with his inquiry report, must go.’
He said it was ‘vital there be an inquiry led by an independent arbitrator – someone who owes the UK government nothing’, and in a letter to the PM suggested it should be judge-led.
Ms Rayner also said: ‘Boris Johnson as Prime Minister has set the tone for the civil service and the rest of government.
‘Which each new revelation there is growing evidence of a culture of turning a blind eye to the rules.
Johnson ordered Mr Case to investigate last week after extraordinary footage emerged of his former press secretary Allegra Stratton and No10 aides giggling about a ‘party’ that was held in Downing Street last year (left – the leaked video; and right – Ms Stratton apologising afterwards)
‘Labour made it clear when the investigation was launched that the person in charge should be uncompromised and able to make a fair and independent judgement. These fresh revelations put that into question.’
Mr Dowden told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I understand and I appreciate that there was a perception, particularly from the media coverage surrounding those alleged events, that we were not abiding by the rules.
‘I have to say to you that there is an ongoing inquiry by the Cabinet Secretary and I’m confident that that inquiry will vindicate the Prime Minister’s assertion that everything that happened was within the rules.
‘But I do appreciate the noise and the sound around that was something that was of concern to voters.’
Mr Johnson was accused of breaking the rules imposed by his own government after it was revealed he acted as an impromptu quiz master in Downing Street amid Tier 2 restrictions last year.
In an image published in the Sunday Mirror, Johnson is seen in front of a laptop in the No. 10 library closely shadowed by two colleagues, one draped in tinsel, the other wearing a Christmas hat.
The quiz is believed to have taken place on December 15 – just three days before the now infamous Downing Street party.
Government sources cited by the Times said the Cabinet Secretary ‘would look at credible allegations of other gatherings and you can’t really say that a photo of the prime minister is not a credible allegation.’
Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi defended the Prime Minister after it emerged Mr Johnson personally hosted a Christmas quiz in Downing Street last year.
Mr Zahawi said Mr Johnson had not broken any coronavirus rules by taking part in the event.
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