British Prime Minister Boris Johnson backed his senior adviser Dominic Cummings on Sunday, despite calls from within his own Conservative Party for the aide to resign for travelling 250 miles during the coronavirus lockdown.
Cummings, who masterminded the 2016 campaign to leave the European Union, came under pressure when newspapers reported he had travelled from London to Durham in late March, when Britain was under a strict lockdown to combat the coronavirus outbreak.
With Johnson’s words that he had acted with integrity, Cummings was safe. But the row within the governing Conservatives looked set to ripple on, with those who called for the senior aide’s resignation expected to be marginalised.
“I’ve had extensive face-to-face conversations with Dominic Cummings,” Johnson told a news conference.
“I believe that in every respect he has acted responsibly and legally,” he added.
A divisive figure, Cummings became the focus of criticism late on Friday when the Daily Mirror and Guardian newspapers reported he had travelled 400 km (250 miles) to Durham in northern England with his wife who had COVID-19 symptoms.
The journey took place at a time when millions of Britons were staying inside and foregoing contacts with friends and relatives. The government’s order at the time was everyone in a household where anyone had symptoms must not leave home.
The newspapers have since reported that Cummings was seen in northern England on other occasions. The government has denied this.
A number of cabinet ministers and the attorney general have said that the journey was justified.
But some Conservatives have said Cummings must go.
“I just see this rattling on now for day after day, wasting the public’s time, consuming political capital and diverting from the real issues we need to deal with,” Conservative lawmaker Steve Baker told Sky News. “No-one is indispensable.”
Other prominent British figures have resigned after breaking lockdown rules. Epidemiologist Neil Ferguson quit as a member of the government’s scientific advisory group after he was visited at home by his girlfriend. Scotland’s chief medical officer, Catherine Calderwood, stepped down after she was caught making two trips to her second home.
Credit: Reuters
Also Read:
UK reports 118 deaths, tally at 36,793
Huge rise in hacking attacks on home workers during lockdown
Hong Kong police fire tear gas on biggest protests since COVID curbs
New York Times fills front page with names of virus dead
1 Comment
Pingback: Japan lifts coronavirus emergency but urges caution - Starvision News