Independent

Boris Johnson denies eating cake at Partygate as he claims Netherlands vaccines raid considered - UK politics live

B.Lee2 hr ago

Boris Johnson has described his 56th birthday celebration at Downing Street as the "feeblest event in the history of human festivity", and shared his surprise at the furore caused by the Partygate scandal.

He denied seeing or eating any cake at an event on 19 June 2020, and said it "never occurred" to him or then-chancellor Rishi Sunak that the gathering was "in some way against the rules".

The former prime minister also claimed he considered sending the British Army on a daring raid to snatch Covid-19 vaccines from an EU warehouse, although he rejected the idea, saying: "The whole thing was nuts."

He demanded of senior military leaders whether he could launch a mission to a warehouse where the EU had stowed five million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, with global supplies dwindling in the height of lockdown.

Mr Johnson's book, Unleashed, is being serialised in the Daily Mail and as well as defending his actions during "Partygate" and writing about his experiences in hospital with Covid , he discusses his wranglings with the EU after his post-Brexit deal was put in place.

The 2024 Conservative Party Conference will be a drastically different affair from last year's gathering in Manchester, when Rishi Sunak's government was in its dying days.

Back then, ministers announced a slew of eye-catching policies that would reshape the future of the country in a desperate last few roles of the dice - Alex Chalk promising to offshore prisoners, Jeremy Hunt planning to slash the number of civil servants and Rishi Sunak scrapping HS2.

This year, Mr Sunak is a lame duck Tory leader and all eyes will be far from the diminished former prime minister. Instead it will be a four-day battle for the future leadership of the party, with the four remaining contenders thrashing it out to try to win over Tory members.

James Cleverly, Kemi Badenoch, Robert Jenrick and Tom Tugendhat will be put to the test in a series of hustings and speeches, as well as taking part in intense lobbying and networking behind the scenes in Birmingham with MPs and the party rank and file.

On offer elsewhere will be former Tory MPs, ousted by the public in July's general election, setting out where they think the party went wrong and what it needs to do next.

High profile names expected to appear are ex-PM Liz Truss, former business secretary Jacob Rees-Mogg and incoming Spectator Editor Michael Gove.

The Independent will be bringing the latest updates and analysis from the conference.

Archie Mitchell, Political Correspondent

Lenin once reputedly said that there are decades where nothing happens, and weeks where decades happen. Soon after the millennium, the British Isles experienced a rush of history : a financial emergency, six general elections, five new prime ministers , a constitutional crisis, a pandemic – and then the death of the Queen .

Some have said that these were the nation's worst years since the Napoleonic wars , and there is one politician who has blazed a meteoric trail across almost every page of this teeming history: Boris Johnson . But only now is he telling his story, for no less than a reported half a million pounds and counting.

At that price, never mind setting the record straight, he'll have to deliver. But what is in the offing from such a maverick pen? As he might put it, a macédoine of regret, maybe mortification, and dismay? As the first parts of Unleashed are serialised, we finally get a hint of what might be to come.

Read the full review here:

Boris Johnson: No Narcissus ever stared more intently into the waters of self-love The former PM's hero, Churchill, is said once to have joked: 'History will be kind to me, because I intend to write it.' It's a saying that Johnson follows to the letter, says Robert McCrum, with a prose style that is both super-rich and awesomely cheap...

Holly Evans 1727504625 Boris Johnson recalls Partygate scandal: 'I ate no blooming cake'

Boris Johnson has denied eating cake at the "feeblest event in the history of human festivity" held on his 56th birthday.

The former prime minister said he did not see or eat any cake at an event on 19 June 2020, according to an extract from his memoir published in the Daily Mail.

Of the occasion, he wrote: "Here is what actually happened that day. I stood briefly at my place in the Cabinet Room, where I have meetings throughout the day, while the Chancellor and assorted members of staff said happy birthday.

"I saw no cake. I ate no blooming cake. If this was a party, it was the feeblest event in the history of human festivity.

"I had only just got over Covid. I did not sing. I did not dance."

Downing Street previously admitted staff "gathered briefly" in the Cabinet Room for what was reportedly a surprise get-together for Mr Johnson organised by his now-wife Carrie.

An ally of the former prime minister, Conor Burns, said Mr Johnson was "ambushed with a cake" at the event.

Holly Evans 1727501400 Boris Johnson was 'surprised' partygate would be a line of attack for Labour

Boris Johnson has written of the moment he was confronted with the partygate story dismissing it initially as "old cobblers".

Writing in Unleashed which isbeing serialised in the Mail +

"[Former Downing Street Director of Communications] Jack explained that the Daily Mirror had a story about a breach of ­lockdown rules in No 10 during the pandemic. They were accusing the press department of having a party on December 18, 2020 – almost exactly a year previously.

"Jack said the story was nonsense, because it was traditional for the press department to have a glass of wine at their desks on a Friday evening. I looked at him blankly. 'So no rules were broken?'

"'No, PM,' he said firmly, 'no rules were broken.'

"'Fine,' I said, and carried on.

"It sounded like a load of old cobblers – probably some desperate nonsense being peddled by embittered former advisers – and I forgot about it. I was most surprised when it was raised at PMQs the next day – as Labour's main line of attack."

Labour called on both the PM and then chancellor Rishi Sunak to go, saying they were "unfit to govern".

Barney Davis 1727496900 Boris Johnson claims 'Brexit saved lives'

Boris Johnson has claimed his Brexit deal allowed a faster rollout of the Covid vaccine saving lives.

Writing in Unleashed, serialised in Mail +, he said: "Under my deal, we came out. We took back control. That meant that when it came to the approval of vaccines, we no longer had to go at the pace of the rest of the European Union.

"We had our own agency – the ­Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency – and we could do our own thing.

"It meant, bluntly, that we were able to immunise huge numbers of elderly and vulnerable people who – if they had been living in an EU country, or in pre-Brexit ­Britain – would unquestionably have been forced to wait for EMA approval for their drugs, and who might therefore have died of Covid.

"It wasn't long before some ­graffiti appeared on the wall in Portobello Road, West London.

"'Brexit saves lives,' it said.

"It wasn't the sort of writing you expect on the wall in the largely Remain-backing Kensington and Chelsea, and I know that some of you will still find it a pretty indigestible assertion. But painful as it may be for some people, it's true."

Barney Davis

Kemi Badenoch has doubled down on her claim that she "became working class" when she got a job at McDonald's.

The Tory leadership hopeful said she came to the UK "with no money, no friends, no parents".

She told LBC at that point in her life she was working class as she "had to work to eat".

"I grew up in a middle class family but coming here I became working class - my dad gave me his last £100, he said 'you know this is all we have' because all our money was gone and this is one of the things that people don't understand," Ms Badenoch said.

Jabed Ahmed 1727494200 Independent readers say Keir Starmer needs 'time and space to clean out the Tories' from government Readers say Starmer needs 'time and space to clean out the Tories' Independent readers reveal hope for the future – with calls to address areas such as wealth inequality, repair public services and create closer links with the EU

Jabed Ahmed

Pension credit claims have hit almost 75,000 amid Government efforts to boost benefits take-up.

Department for Work and Pensions figures released on Friday showed the Government received around 74,400 pension credit claims in the eight weeks since 29 July, when Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced means testing for the winter fuel payment.

This is up from 29,500 claims in the eight weeks before the announcement.

But in the seven days beginning on 16 September, the department received 11,800 claims, down from 13,400 the week before.

The vast majority (92 per cent) of claims made in the week beginning 16 September were made online.

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall has previously urged pensioners to check if they are eligible for the benefit, which would unlock winter fuel payments of up to £300.

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Jabed Ahmed

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