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    Dominic Cummings news – live: Boris Johnson’s ex-aide claims PM did make ‘bodies pile high’ comment

    Test-and trace system delayed because of Hancock’s ‘stupid’ 100,000 tests a day plan, says CummingsDominic Cummings has told MPs, on record, he heard Boris Johnson say he would rather see “bodies pile high” than impose another lockdown on the nation.The former No 10 aide told MPs, during a Commons committee hearing, Mr Johnson made the comment “in the PM’s study … on 31 October”.Mr Johnson last month denied having made the remark after he was confronted by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer during prime minister’s questions.It comes after Downing Street failed to deny another of Mr Cummings’ claims today, that Mr Johnson considered sacking Matt Hancock during the first few months of the pandemic. Quizzed by reporters, the prime minister’s official spokesman twice declined to dismiss the claim – instead suggesting Mr Johnson and the health secretary “worked closely” during the coronavirus crisis.Mr Cummings said Mr Hancock should have been fired for “15 to 20” different things – accusing him of “criminal, disgraceful behaviour that caused serious harm”. Show latest update

    1622039996PM did make ‘bodies pile high’ comment, Cummings says It’s the moment we all knew was coming. Dominic Cummings has gone on the record to say he heard Boris Johnson say in October that he would rather see “bodies pile high” than impose another lockdown on the nation.The former aide told the Commons committee: “There’s been a few different versions of this, of these stories knocking around. There was a version of it in the Sunday Times, which was not accurate. But the version that the BBC reported was accurate. I heard that in the prime minister’s study. That was not in September though, that was immediately after he finally made the decision to do the lockdown on 31 October.”It comes after the PM himself denied making the comments, after various Tory ministers came out to deny the accusations. My colleague Chiara Giordano reports:Sam Hancock26 May 2021 15:391622038408Ashworth to quiz Hancock during Urgent QuestionsTwo Urgent Questions are scheduled for Thursday morning, including a chance for Matt Hancock to respond to various claims made today by Dominic Cummings.Mr Hancock, the health secretary, will be quizzed by his Labour counterpart Jonathan Ashworth after Mr Cummings claimed the former was totally unprepared for the coronavirus pandemic. The only question now is: will he turn up? And if so, will he refrain from running a mile? (See below post.) Sam Hancock26 May 2021 15:131622038099Hancock runs away from reporters when asked about CummingsIn case you missed it earlier. While out for a run this morning, Matt Hancock stopped and spoke to reporters to encourage newly-eligible 30-year-olds to “go out and get a vaccine”. But when asked about Dominic Cummings’ upcoming committee hearing before MP’s, the health secretary quickly resumed his running duties and gave only a wave as a Sky News reporter shouted after him.“Smile and run boys, smile and run” seems to be today’s official advice to ministers.Cal Byrne reports: More

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    Dominic Cummings said he heard Boris Johnson say let ‘bodies pile high’ instead of imposing lockdown

    Dominic Cummings has said he heard Boris Johnson say he would rather see “bodies pile high” than impose another lockdown on the nation.The former chief aide to the prime minister told the Commons Health and Social Care and Science and Technology Committees: “There’s been a few different versions of this, of these stories knocking around.“There was a version of it in the Sunday Times, which was not accurate. But the version that the BBC reported was accurate.“I heard that in the prime minister’s study. That was not in September though, that was immediately after he finally made the decision to do the lockdown on 31 October.”Mr Johnson last month denied having made the remark after he was confronted by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer during prime minister’s questions.Cabinet minister Michael Gove also insisted he “never heard” the alleged comments.More follows More

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    ‘Disastrous’ mistakes caused tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths from Covid, says Dominic Cummings

    “Disastrous” mistakes by Boris Johnson’s government caused tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths, the prime minister’s former top adviser has told MPs.Mr Cummings said Mr Johnson locked England down at least three weeks late in the spring of 2020, as the government pursued a “herd immunity” strategy in the hope of limiting the disease to a “single peak” by letting people catch the virus.Giving evidence to an inquiry by the House of Commons health and science committees, Mr Cummings said that many of the failings behind the UK’s huge death toll remain in place, including inadequate control of borders.And he said there was “no excuse” for the PM to delay a public inquiry into the handling of the pandemic until next year. MPs should make clear that the proposed timetable is “intolerable”, he said.“Tens of thousands of people died who didn’t need to die,” said Mr Cummings. “There’s absolutely no excuse for delaying that. A lot of the reasons for why that happened are still in place.”Boris Johnson ‘completely out of his depth,’ says CummingsMr Cummings said Johnson and other government leaders were “completely out of their depth” when coronavirus hit.He portrayed a “lack of urgency” in 10 Downing Street, with the prime minister treating Covid-19 as a “scare story” and officials suggesting that herd immunity could be achieved by encouraging people to hold “chickenpox parties”. Mr Johnson even suggested he could have himself injected with the virus on live TV to convince people it was safe, he said.And he launched a sustained attack on “criminal, disgraceful” health secretary Matt Hancock, who he said should have been sacked 20 times over for lying about the availability of personal protection equipment (PPE) and the testing of hospital patients discharged into care homes.Mr Cummings said he “lost the argument” with Mr Johnson over reopening the economy in the summer of 2020, having unsuccessfully advised against calls for workers to return to offices and the return of students to universities in September.When the second wave of coronavirus arrived in the autumn, he said that Mr Johnson wanted to be like “the mayor in Jaws”, who notoriously kept beaches open despite shark attacks, by avoiding a second lockdown to protect the economy.Cummings described as “completely mad” Johnson’s decision to reject scientific advice for a “circuit-breaker” lockdown in September last year. Despite “all credible, serious people” arguing for the two-week shutdown to nip a second wave in the bud, Mr Johnson decided he was “just going to ignore the advice”, he said.And he confirmed he heard Mr Johnson say in October that he would rather see “bodies pile high” than impose another lockdown on the nation.“I heard that in the prime minister’s study,” said Cummings. “That was not in September though, that was immediately after he finally made the decision to do the lockdown on 31 October.”Explaining his decision to resign in November, he said that his relationship with Johnson had taken a “terrible dive” because the PM knew that “I blamed him for the whole situation”.“Fundamentally, I regarded him as unfit for the job,” said Mr Cummings, who added that Mr Johnson’s fiancee Carrie Symonds was “trying to appoint her friends to particular jobs” in Downing Street.He said that he now felt he should have gone to the PM earlier in the autumn and “held the gun to his head” by threatening to resign and tell the public that “we’ve killed thousands of people” because of Mr Johnson’s decisions. He defended his own decision to take his family to Durham at the height of the first wave, despite admitting the fallout from the trip was “a major disaster for the government and the Covid policy”.Mr Cummings said it was “bizarre” that ministers were now denying that herd immunity was the government’s plan until mid-March last year. He said this led to delays in the closure of borders and the introduction of face-coverings and mass testing as the public health administration accepted “ludicrous” beliefs that these measures would be ineffective, he said.The former Vote Leave supremo admitted he was “frightened” to challenge the “groupthink” from Whitehall departments and scientific advisers that herd immunity would avoid a second wave of virus in the winter, when the NHS would be under pressure from seasonal illnesses.He told MPs that he “hit the panic button” on 11 March after being told by independent scientists that the plan was “completely flawed” and that the UK was heading for its worst catastrophe since World War 2 with up to 500,000 dead.But he said that even this was “far, far too late”, telling MPs: “I failed and I apologise for that.”Mr Cummings told MPs that if the PM had refused to change course at this point, he was considering resigning and issuing a public warning that the government was “going to kill hundreds of thousands of people”.Even after the switch to a lockdown policy, he said there was no plan in place for shielding vulnerable people, testing for the virus or for providing furlough payments to those who were unable to work.And he described a “meltdown weekend” in late March after Mr Johnson himself caught Covid-19 and went into infectious care, when he said that “in many ways, the whole core of government fell apart”.“There is no doubt that the prime minister made some very bad misjudgments and got some very serious things wrong,” said Mr Cummings. “It’s also the case that there’s no doubt that he was extremely badly let down by the whole system. It’s a system failure, of which I include myself in that as well. I also failed.”There was “no doubt that many senior people performed disastrously below the standards which the country has a right to expect”, he said.He accused Mr Hancock of “lying to everybody on multiple occasions” in official meetings and in public, and said that both he and cabinet secretary Mark Sedwill repeatedly urged Mr Johnson to sack him.Sir Mark told the PM he had “lost confidence in the secretary of state’s honesty” and warned that “the British system is not set up to deal with a Secretary of State who repeatedly lies in meetings”, said Mr Cummings. And he said he himself warned that if Hancock remained in post “we are going to kill people and it will be a catastrophe”.He said that Mr Johnson “came close” to removing the health secretary in April 2020, but “just fundamentally wouldn’t do it”, adding: “There was certainly no good reason for keeping him.”When the health secretary was claiming that everyone was getting the treatment they needed in the first wave, many were in fact “dying in horrific circumstances”, he said. And he said that Mr Hancock had wrongly assured the PM that there was no problem with supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) and later wrongly blamed the Treasury for shortages.Mr Cummings said Mr Hancock – who will himself give evidence to the committees on 10 June – should have been fired for his “incredibly stupid” public commitment to 100,000 tests a day by the end of April 2020, which had diverted resources and “completely disrupted” the programme.“It was criminal, disgraceful behaviour which caused serious harm,” he said, saying that this was the reason testing was taken away from the Department of Health and put into a separate agency.And he said that Mr Hancock gave “categorical” assurances in March 2020 that people were being tested for Covid-19 before being discharged from hospital into care homes, when “we subsequently found out that that hadn’t happened”. Government rhetoric about “putting a shield around care homes” was “complete nonsense”, he said.The release of elderly patients to care homes “wasn’t thought through properly, there wasn’t any kind of proper plan”. “It’s clear in retrospect that a completely catastrophic situation happened with these people being sent back untested and seeding coronavirus in care homes,” he said. “It was a function of the fact that the system was completely overwhelmed.”And he told MPs: “We were told that people wouldn’t be sent back to care homes until after they’ve been tested for Covid and we were told that there was a plan for shielding. It turned out that neither of those things was correct. “We didn’t really understand the catastrophe around people being sent back to care homes who were already Covid-infected until April.”Mr Cummings praised chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance for proposing a vaccine taskforce under Katie Bingham to drive the jabs programme outside the Whitehall system.But he said it was now “obvious” that at the outset of the pandemic, when pharmaceutical companies developed potential vaccines “literally within hours”, the government should have set up immediate human trials.By paying human guinea-pigs to be inoculated with experimental vaccines and infected with Covid, the UK could have brought forward the first immunisations from December to September, he said.Looking back to the process which led to the imposition of lockdown in the UK on 23 March, Mr Cummings said: “In retrospect, it’s clear that the official plan was wrong, it’s clear that the whole advice was wrong and I think it’s clear that we obviously should have locked down essentially in the first week of March at the latest.”Assurances given by Mr Hancock in January last year that effective pandemic preparations were in place “were basically completely hollow”.In an ideal world, he said the Covid response would have been led by “a kind of dictator… with close to kingly authority”, naming his preferred candidate as Marc Warner – a data specialist who worked with him on the Vote Leave campaign and whose scientist brother Ben was controversially drafted into government meetings on the pandemic.He hailed Marc Warner, the chief executive of artificial intelligence company Faculty, as “one of the smartest and most ethical people I’ve ever met” and said that he had personally saved thousands of lives by raising the alarm about the herd immunity strategy after being drafted into the Covid operation by NHS England boss Simon Stevens.Ideally, the UK would have introduced Taiwan-style mass testing, closed borders and compulsory quarantine from January, with individual and household isolation for those infected the following month, said Cummings.Cummings says he pushed for lockdown 11 days before it was introducedBut he said that the PM and many other senior people in Whitehall had the view that the economic danger from lockdown was worse than the health threat from coronavirus. Their assumption was that the British public would not accept lockdowns of the kind seen in China, he said.At one meeting on 12 March he said that Sir Mark Sedwill told Mr Johnson: “Prime minister you should go on TV tomorrow and explain to people the herd immunity plan and that it’s like the old chickenpox parties, we need people to get this disease because that’s how we get herd immunity by September.”“There were quite a few people around Whitehall who thought that the real danger was to the economy,” Mr Cummings told MPs.“The prime minister’s view throughout January, February, March was – as he said in many meetings – the real danger here is not disease, the real danger is the measures that we take to deal with the disease and the economic destruction that that will cause.”He blamed “groupthink” at the highest levels of government for the failure to raise the alert about the possible scale of the threat from coronavirus. But he rejected suggestions that chancellor Rishi Sunak was among those attempting to prevent lockdown, insisting he had been “supportive” throughout.Mr Cummings said the response was hobbled by the inadequacies of the data provided to government.“The lack of testing data was an absolutely critical disaster because we didn’t realise early enough how far it had already spread,” he told MPs.“The testing data was wrong, the graphs we were shown and the models were all wrong because they were all pushed out to the right, and that massively contributed to the whole lack of urgency.”Lockdown delay led to warning UK was ‘absolutely f****d’, Cummings saysMr Cummings said that he realised that the logic behind the UK’s approach was “completely flawed”, after being approached in early March by a scientist who warned that the plan “could easily be mad… could be incredibly destructive”.He said he raised concerns with members of the PM’s Scientific Advisory Group (Sage) the evening of 11 March.And he said he sent a message to Johnson the following morning warning that the government approach was “completely behind the pace” and that the public must be advised immediately to stay at home in order to avoid as many as 500,000 deaths.The scale of the trauma which he envisaged was reflected in a line scribbled in marker pen on the bottom of a whiteboard sketching out the first draft of Plan B on 12 March, which asked: “Who do we NOT save?”He said “enormous credit” should go to the government’s second most senior civil servant Helen McNamara, who marched into 10 Downing Street on 13 March to tell the PM that on the basis of what experts had told her: “There is no plan. We are in huge trouble… I think we are absolutely f***ked.”The situation in Downing Street in mid-March was like “a scene from Independence Day with Jeff Goldblum saying the aliens are here and your whole plan is broken and you need a new plan”, said Mr Cummings.At a crucial meeting on March 14 Boris Johnson was told that models showing the peak was “weeks and weeks and weeks away” in June were “completely wrong” and that the government had to “gamble on an alternative plan”.He said the PM was warned: “The NHS is going to be smashed in weeks, really we’ve got days to act.”Mr Cummings admitted: “The truth is that senior ministers senior officials, senior advisors like me fell disastrously short of the standards the public has a right to expect of its government in a crisis like this,” said Mr Cummings.“When the public needed it most, the government failed. And I like to say to all the families of those who died unnecessarily how sorry I am for the mistakes that were made and for my own mistakes at that.”He admitted that he had delayed challenging the herd immunity policy because he was “frightened” of standing up against the prevailing consensus from Sage, the Department of Health and the Cabinet Office that trying to suppress Covid in the spring would simply lead to a worse outbreak when restrictions were eventually lifted later in the year.“I was asking myself in that two-week period, if I pull if I hit the panic button and persuade the prime minister to shift and then it all goes completely wrong, I’m going to have killed God knows how many hundreds of thousands of people,” he said. “If I’d acted earlier, lots of people might still be alive.”He denied that the government’s failings were down to poor communications, instead blaming Mr Johnson’s failure to make his mind up.“Fundamentally, the reason for all these problems was bad policy decisions, bad planning, bad operational capability,” he said.“It doesn’t matter if you’ve got great people doing communications, if the prime minister changes his mind 10 times a day and then calls up the media and contradicts his own policy, day after day after day, you’re going to have a communications disaster.”Mr Cummings said the government had failed to explain to the public the importance of self-isolation for those who may have come into contact with Covid and failed to provide proper incentives for them to comply.He said he argued for a South Korean-style “carrot and stick” system of financial support backed up with the threat of jail for breaking quarantine.“If we had just cut-and-pasted what they were doing in Singapore or Taiwan, everything would have been better,” he told MPs.Mr Cummings said: “Fundamentally, there was no proper border policy because the Prime Minister never wanted a proper border policy.“Repeatedly in meeting after meeting I and others said all we have to do is download the Singapore or Taiwan documents in English and impose them here.“We’re imposing all of these restrictions on people domestically but people can see that everyone is coming in from infected areas, it’s madness, it’s undermining the whole message that we should take it seriously.“At that point he was back to, ‘lockdown was all a terrible mistake, I should’ve been the mayor of Jaws, we should never have done lockdown one, the travel industry will all be destroyed if we bring in a serious border policy’.“To which, of course, some of us said there’s not going to be a tourism industry in the autumn if we have a second wave, the whole logic was completely wrong.”He told MPs that he probably should have resigned in September 2020, because of the fundamental differences between himself and the PM on Covid policy.“If I could have clicked my fingers and done things, there would have been a serious border policy, masks would have been compulsory, Hancock would have been fired, we’d have done dozens and dozens and dozens of things,” he said.“Fundamentally, the prime minister and I did not agree about Covid after March. After March, he thought the lesson to be learned, is we shouldn’t have been locked down, we should have focused on the economy, it was all a disaster, he should have been the mayor in Jaws. I thought that perspective was completely mad.”Mr Cummings said that many junior officials had performed well in the pandemic, only to be let down by the failings of their leaders.He told MPs: “It’s just completely crackers that someone like me should have been in there, just the same as it’s crackers that Boris Johnson was in there, and that the choice at the last election was Jeremy Corbyn.“The problem in this crisis was very much ‘lions led by donkeys’ over and over again.”Describing the atmosphere within government in the crucial weeks when Covid-19 was spreading from China to Europe, Mr Cummings said: “No 10 was not operating on a war footing in February in any way shape or form. Lots of key people were literally skiing.Mr Cummings said: “In February the prime minister regarded this as just a scare story, he described it as the new swine flu.”Asked if he had told Johnson this was not the case, he told MPs: “Certainly, but the view of various officials inside Number 10 was if we have the Prime Minister chairing Cobra meetings and he just tells everyone ‘it’s swine flu, don’t worry about it, I’m going to get (chief medical officer) Chris Whitty to inject me live on TV with coronavirus so everyone realises it’s nothing to be frightened of’, that would not help actually serious panic.” More

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    Rob Roberts: Government moves to close ‘loophole’ preventing disgraced Tory MP from facing recall petition

    The government will move to close a loophole which currently prevents constituents of disgraced Conservative MP Rob Roberts from forcing a by-election.Mr Roberts faces a six-week suspension from parliament after a House of Commons watchdog found he had made “repeated and unwanted sexual advances” towards his employee in breach of sexual misconduct rules.However, because the punishment was recommended by the Independent Expert Panel (IEP), rather than a Commons committee he is set to escape a recall petition, even if MPs back his suspension.Commons leader Jacob Rees-Mogg will invite the “relevant bodies” to consider whether the laws need to be changed to enable the recall process to be triggered in such cases, the government has said.Cabinet minister Grants Schapps shared his support for changes needed to close the loophole. “Although it’s a decision for the House of Commons, I rather agree that this loophole does need to be closed,” the transport secretary told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.Mr Shapps added: “This has gone through a new independent process and doesn’t have the same rules about the so-called recall process which is where constituents can essentially call for an election.”The Tory party has suspended the whip from the Deyln MP, so he will sit as an independent for the meantime.Labour has called for Mr Roberts to “resign immediately” and attacked the “technicality” which allowed him to avoid a recall petition.Labour MP Chris Bryant, chair of Commons’ Committee on Standards, said: “I think it would be entirely dishonourable for a member to exploit that loophole and I think the government has to close it as a matter of urgency.”But it is unclear whether potential changes will happen anytime soon. Mr Rees-Mogg will ask the relevant Commons bodies to consider whether they could be made “in future”.A government spokesperson said: “A case of this severity highlights the need to look again at whether the process is striking the right balance between protecting the confidentiality of complainants and ensuring consistency with other types of conduct cases.“The central aim of the independent complaints and grievance scheme is to help improve the working culture of parliament and it will need to continue to evolve and improve over time.”The spokesman added: “The leader of the house will invite the relevant bodies to consider whether any changes could be made in future to the process to enable recall to be triggered.”MPs will now decide whether they will back the IEP’s recommended six-week sanction. More

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    Piers Morgan apologises for not going ‘much harder’ on government over coronavirus response

    Piers Morgan has apologised for the way he held the government to account during the coronavirus pandemic, saying he “should have gone much much harder”.The former Good Morning Britain host made the remarks as Dominic Cummings described the chaos in Downing Street in the days leading up to the first lockdown.Boris Johnson’s former chief adviser told MPs his boss was more concerned about the economic impact of Covid-19 than the health risk in the early stages of the pandemic.”The prime minister’s view, throughout January, February, March, was – as he said in many meetings – the real danger here is not the disease, the real danger here is the measures that we take to deal with a disease and the economic destruction that that will cause,” Mr Cummings said.”He had that view all the way through. In fact, one of the reasons why it was so rocky getting from [14 March 2020], when we suggested plan B to him, to actual lockdown was because he kept basically bouncing back to, ‘We don’t really know how dangerous it is, we’re going to completely destroy the economy by having lockdown, maybe we shouldn’t do it’.”Midway through Mr Cummings’ testimony, Mr Morgan tweeted: “Wow. Cummings is confirming everything I feared about our government’s appalling handling of this pandemic. “His testimony is utterly devastating and exposes a terrifying level of incompetence and deceit led by Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock that cost 1,000s of lives. Heads should roll.”He added: “A personal statement: I’d like to sincerely apologise for the way I held the government to account during this pandemic.“It’s quite clear from Cummings’ shocking testimony that I should have gone much much harder. Sorry.”In November last year, Mr Morgan accused the government of “boycotting” GMB for 201 days. He had previously accused the government of “cowardice” for not fielding members of the cabinet for questioning.He quit the morning news programme after six years following outrage at his claim he did not believe “a word” of the Duchess of Sussex’s claims to have suffered suicidal thoughts during her time as a senior royal More

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    Boris Johnson fails to deny he delayed lockdown as ‘Covid only killing 80-year-olds’

    Boris Johnson has failed to deny that he rejected a fresh Covid-19 lockdown at a crucial moment on the basis that the disease was “only killing 80 year olds”.Asked about the reported comments by Opposition leader Keir Starmer during prime minister’s questions Mr Johnson changed the subject and did not address the issue.It came after he previously denied saying he would rather than “bodies pile high” than introduce restrictions again.Mr Johnson came in for heavy criticism from his former chief aide Dominic Cummings on Wednesday, who was giving evidence to MPs at a joint hearing of the health and technology committees.Ahead of the meeting ITV News reported that Mr Cummings would make the claim about the PM’s comments the next day.Speaking in the Commons Sir Keir said: “Another central allegation briefed overnight, is that the Prime Minister delayed the circuit break over the autumn half term because ‘Covid was only killing 80 year olds’. “Can I remind the prime minister that over 83,000 people over 80 lost their lives to this virus, and that his decision to delay for 40 days from the Sage guidance on the 21 of September until the 31 October will be seen as one of the single biggest failings of the last year. “Now having been told of the evidence does the prime minister accept that he used the words, “Covid was only killing eight year olds”, or words to those effect?”Mr Johnson’s reply did not address the question, instead veering into issues of Brexit.“We saw what happens during the pandemic, and particularly he talks about the September lockdown,” the prime minister stated.“My approach to it and the very, very difficult decision that the country faced – and of course this will be a matter for the inquiry to go into – but we have a an objective test, in the sense that there was a circuit breaker of the kind he describes in Wales, it did not work. And I’m afraid to speak… I’m absolutely confident that we took the decisions in the best interest of the of the British people. “And when it comes to when it comes to hindsight, just remind the right honourable gentleman that he actually denied this at the time, and then had to correct it, but he voted to stay in the European Medicines Agency, which would have made it impossible for us to do the vaccine rollout at the pace that we have.”Speaking after the exchange, Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner said: “Of course the PM can’t deny that he delayed locking down in the Autumn because Covid was ‘only killing 80 year olds’. An utterly abhorrent thing for a PM to say. “And it shows – his casual disregard and contempt for the lives of British people had devastating consequences.”Following the exchange, Downing Street also declined to deny the allegation. The Prime Minister’s press secretary said: “I think the point of this is we’re not going to engage with every allegation made today.“”And the PM was setting out that throughout this pandemic our priority has been to save lives, protect the NHS and support people’s jobs and livelihoods across the entire United Kingdom.” More

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    No 10 fails to deny Boris Johnson considered firing Matt Hancock

    No 10 has failed to deny Dominic Cummings’ claim that Boris Johnson considered sacking Matt Hancock during the height of the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic.The prime minister’s official spokesman twice declined to dismiss the claim, instead suggesting the prime minister and health secretary “worked closely” during the coronavirus crisis, with both focused on “saving lives”.However, when asked whether Mr Johnson had full confidence in his senior minister, they replied: “Yes, the health secretary has been working closely with the prime minister throughout”.During a committee hearing on Wednesday, the former senior No 10 aide repeatedly took aim at Mr Hancock, suggesting he should have been fired for at least “15-20 things” and later claimed Mr Johnson “came close” to removing him in April 2020, but “just fundamentally wouldn’t do it”.He said he could not explain why Mr Hancock remained in post, adding: “There’s certainly no good reason for keeping him.”When the health secretary was claiming that everyone was getting the treatment they needed in the first wave, many were in fact “dying in horrific circumstances”, Mr Cummings suggested. And he said that Mr Hancock had wrongly assured the prime minister that there was no problem with supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) and later wrongly blamed the Treasury for shortages.Pressed on Mr Cummings’ claim that the test-and-trace system was delayed last spring because of the health secretary’s “stupid” plan to carry out 100,000 tests a day, the prime minister’s spokesman said the goal had a “galvanising effect on massively scaling up our testing capacity”.They added: “It is simply the case we went from having a few thousand tests a day available in the UK to having many hundreds of thousands in a matter of months — that undoubtedly saved lives.”During the evidence session, Mr Cummings also repeated allegations that Mr Johnson had offered to appear on live television and to be injected with Covid-19 – before contracting the virus – in order to reassure the public and so that “everyone realises it’s nothing to be frightened of”.The Daily Mail reported ahead of the hearing that Mr Johnson had described the virus as “kung flu” at the onset of the pandemic, and that he was willing to be injected on television by England’s chief medical officer professor Chris Whitty.Quizzed on the claim, the prime minister’s spokesman said: “I don’t plan to get into various allegations and claims that have been made today, our focus is on recovering from the pandemic, moving through the road map and distributing the vaccines.” More

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    Dominic Cummings says Matt Hancock should have been fired for at ‘least 15-20 things’

    Matt Hancock should have been fired by Boris Johnson for at least “15-20 things” including “lying” to officials, Dominic Cummings has insisted.Answering MPs’ questions at a joint inquiry into the handling of the pandemic, the former No 10 adviser credited some officials in the Department of Health, but insisted they “were terribly let down by senior leadership”.Taking aim at Mr Hancock, he said: “I think the secretary of state for health should have been fired for at least 15-20 things, including lying to everybody in multiple occasions in meeting after meeting in the Cabinet room and publicly.”Pressed on whether people should be be worried about facing “corporate manslaughter charges”, Mr Cummings said he was unsure because he was not sure of the law behind such charges.But he added: “I think that there is no doubt many senior people performed far, far disastrously below the standards which the country has a right to expect.“I think the secretary of state for health is certainly one of those people. I said repeatedly to the prime minister he should be fired, so did the Cabinet secretary, so did many other senior people.”Asked to provide evidence of the cabinet secretary’s “lying”, the prime minister’s most senior adviser until the end of 2020, said: “There are numerous examples. I mean in the summer he said that everybody who needed treatment got the treatment that they required.To sign up to The Independent’s free politics newsletters click here“He knew that that was a lie because he had been briefed by the chief scientific adviser and the chief medical officer himself about the first peak, and we were told explicitly people did not get the treatment they deserved, many people were left to die in horrific circumstances.”Mr Cummings who has previously described the Department of Health as a “smoking ruin”, said: “The procurement system with which they were operating was just completely hopeless. There wasn’t any system set up to deal with proper emergency procurement”.Citing an example of a meeting, he claimed the department had been “turning down” ventilators during the height of the crisis because the price had been marked up.“It completely beggars belief that was happening,” he told MPs. “The whole system was like wading through treacle. There wasn’t an emergency fast-track process to deal with these kind of things — that’s why I described it as a smoking ruin.”He added: “That’s why the cabinet secretary [Sir Mark Sedwill] quite rightly said we’ve got to basically divvy up the secretary of state’s job because there’s just multiple huge things here that are being dropped. It was clear the department was just completely and utterly overwhelmed.”Mr Cummings said that both he and cabinet secretary Mark Sedwill repeatedly urged Mr Johnson to sack the health secretary.Sir Mark told the PM he had “lost confidence in the secretary of state’s honesty” and warned that “the British system is not set up to deal with a Secretary of State who repeatedly lies in meetings”, said Mr Cummings. And he said he himself warned that if Hancock remained in post “we are going to kill people and it will be a catastrophe”.He said that Mr Johnson “came close” to removing the health secretary in April 2020, but “just fundamentally wouldn’t do it”. He said he could not explain why Hancock remained in post, adding: “There’s certainly no good reason for keeping him.”When the health secretary was claiming that everyone was getting the treatment they needed in the first wave, many were in fact “dying in horrific circumstances”, he said. And he said that Mr Hancock had wrongly assured the PM that there was no problem with supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) and later wrongly blamed the Treasury for shortages.Mr Cummings said Mr Hancock – who will himself give evidence to the committees on 10 June – was “incredibly stupid” to make a public commitment to 100,000 tests a day by the end of April, which had “completely disrupted” the programme.He told MPs that Hancock “should have been fired” for trying to divert efforts into meeting his target, telling MPs: “It was criminal, disgraceful behaviour which caused serious harm.” This was why testing was taken away from the Department of Health and put into a separate agency, he said.And he said that Mr Hancock had given “categorical” assurances in March 2020 that people were being tested for Covid-19 before being discharged from hospital into care homes, when “we subsequently found out that that hadn’t happened”. Government rhetoric about “putting a shield around care homes” was “complete nonsense”, he said.“We were told that people wouldn’t be sent back to care homes until after they’ve been tested for Covid and we were told that there was a plan for shielding,” said Mr Cummings. “It turned out that neither of those things was correct.“We didn’t really understnd the catastrophe around people being sent back to care homes who were already Covid-infected until April.”However, Mr Cummings did credit Rishi Sunak, the chancellor, for introducing the furlough scheme, which has paid the wages of millions of people in the private sector during the Covid lockdowns. More