Boris Johnson news – live: Police ‘should give final analysis’ on No 10 parties as PM handed ‘one last chance’
Boris Johnson takes ‘personal responsibility’ for North Shropshire by-election lossThe Metropolitan Police should carry out a “final analysis” of the Downing Street Christmas parties allegations, the Commons standards committee chair has suggested, after top civil servant Simon Case stepped down as the internal inquiry’s lead following claims that he attended a drinks event himself.His “recusal” came as another blow to Boris Johnson, who defied calls to appoint an external investigator in his place in favour of another civil servant, just hours after his party lost the true-blue seat of North Shropshire for the first time nearly 200 years after a 34 per cent swing to the Lib Dems in a by-election triggered by Tory sleaze.Furious Tory MPs, many of whom considered the ballot something of a referendum on the PM’s leadership, warned that the “Teflon has come off” after the defeat, with one warning that Mr Johnson has “one last chance” to make changes at the heart of his operation.Show latest update
1639839029Opinion | Simon Case has trashed his own career and the office of cabinet secretary in one fell swoopIn an opinion piece, Independent veteran and former political editor Donald Macintyre asks “why on earth” Simon Case took the job of investigating the Downing Street party allegations in the first place. He writes: “Even if it hadn’t turned out that one of these gatherings occurred in his own private office – prompting his humiliating recusal on Friday from the official enquiry into what went on this time last year, it was clear that he was not the right man for the job.“For a start, any investigator with a modicum of independence would have surely wanted to ask the cabinet secretary whether, as head of the Home Civil Service, he himself knew about the gatherings across government, including the ones next door in Downing Street. And if not, why not?”You can read his thinking in full here:Andy Gregory18 December 2021 14:501639838121PM’s former boss would ‘probably vote for Keir Starmer’Discussing whether Boris Johnson can turn his flailing premiership around in the eyes of his own MPs, the prime minister’s former boss Sir Max Hastings told LBC: “He can’t turn it around, he’s incapable of changing.“And anybody who thinks that Boris Johnson is going to change is a fool. The question is whether anyone who succeeds him is going to be able to do a lot better.”Asked who he would vote for in an election today, the former Daily Telegraph editor said: “I think I’d probably vote for Keir Starmer, because I think that Britain desperately needs a change of government. I think the Tories have shot their bolt and they’ve shown their own unfitness for power by making Boris Johnson prime minister.”Andy Gregory18 December 2021 14:351639836480Politics Explained: What’s happening with Brexit?As the first anniversary of Brexit approaches, it seems that the arguments may soon splutter to an exhausted standstill, writes our associate editor Sean O’Grady. The British appear to have caved in on the sensitive issue of the European Court’s jurisdiction over the operation of the single market in Northern Ireland – which is, after all, explicitly inside both the EU customs union as well as the UK internal market. In return, the EU has indicated it may go easy on the strict interpretation of the rules on goods moving between Great Britain and Northern Ireland/Ireland/the EU. Medicines, in particular, can flow freely. Quietly, the UK and Jersey have been more generous to French fisherfolk, another flashpoint. It may actually be that Brexit is, practically speaking, “done” at last, the “interim” status of the agreement allowing both sides to reserve their formal final positions indefinitely, and preserve their pride. Like the Korean war that ended in 1953, but which is technically still on, it is a ceasefire that seems set to turn into a permanent, if sometimes volatile, truce.Read his analysis in full with Independent Premium: More
