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‘Hand on heart ... I did not lie’ about ‘partygate,’ former U.K. premier Boris Johnson says

Boris Johnson
Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson testifies before the Committee of Privileges at the House of Commons in London on March 22, 2023.
(House of Commons via Associated Press)
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Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted “hand on heart” Wednesday that he never lied to lawmakers about rule-breaking government parties during the COVID-19 pandemic, mounting a robust defense at a hearing that could further damage or even end his tumultuous political career.

The House of Commons standards committee questioned Johnson over misleading statements he made to Parliament about gatherings in government buildings that breached lockdown rules. If the committee concludes that he deliberately lied, he could face suspension or lose his seat in the House of Commons.

Johnson was resolute, telling the committee after taking an oath on a Bible: “Hand on heart ... I did not lie to the House.”

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“If anybody thinks I was partying during lockdown, they are completely wrong,” Johnson said during a session that displayed his characteristic self-confidence and verbosity.

Johnson also criticized the committee, which has four fellow Conservative members and three from opposition parties, saying it was acting as “investigator, prosecutor, judge and jury.”

The three-hour hearing was a moment of peril for a politician whose career has been a roller coaster of scandals and comebacks.

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If the House of Commons Committee of Privileges concludes Johnson lied deliberately, it would probably end hopes of a return to power for the 58-year-old politician, who led the Conservative Party to a landslide victory in 2019.

Boris Johnson was the London mayor who hosted the Olympics, the leader who pledged to ‘get Brexit done’ and the premier brought down by ‘Partygate.’

He was forced out by his own party in July 2022 after getting mired in scandals over money, ethics and judgment — including what has become known as “partygate.”

After reports of the parties emerged in December 2021, Johnson repeatedly assured lawmakers that he and his staff had always followed the rules.

That turned out to be wrong, Johnson acknowledged. But he said it was “what I honestly believed at the time.”

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“I apologize for inadvertently misleading this House, but to say that I did it recklessly or deliberately is completely untrue,” he said.

In an interim report this month, the committee said evidence strongly suggested that it would have been ”obvious” to Johnson that gatherings in his No. 10 Downing St. offices in 2020 and 2021 broke COVID-19 lockdown rules.

But Johnson said it never occurred to him that the events — which variously included cake, wine, cheese and a “secret Santa” festive gift exchange — broke the restrictions on socializing that his government had imposed nationwide.

He said he “honestly believed” the five events he attended, including a sendoff for a staffer and his own surprise birthday party, were “lawful work gatherings” intended to boost morale among overworked staff members coping with a deadly pandemic.

Boris Johnson is among several British lawmakers trying to scoop up support ahead of a short, intense contest to become the country’s next premier.

He said that at the June 19, 2020, birthday celebration, no one sang “Happy Birthday” and the “Union Jack cake remained in its Tupperware box, unnoticed by me.”

Johnson said “trusted advisors” assured him that neither the legally binding rules nor the government’s coronavirus guidance had been broken.

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However, several senior officials denied advising Johnson that the guidance always was followed. Written evidence released by the committee Wednesday showed that principal private secretary Martin Reynolds said that he had “questioned whether it was realistic to argue that all guidance had been followed at all times.”

Police eventually issued 126 fines over the late-night soirees, boozy parties and “wine time Fridays,” including one to Johnson, and the scandal helped hasten the end of his premiership.

Revelations about the gatherings sparked anger among Britons who had followed the government’s pandemic rules, unable to visit friends and family or even say goodbye to dying relatives in hospitals. Police fined thousands of people across the country for minor breaches of the rules.

Former British Treasury chief Rishi Sunak is front-runner in the Conservative Party’s race to replace Liz Truss as prime minister.

Johnson said he was later “genuinely shocked” by the government’s own rule-breaking that was uncovered by police and by senior civil servant Sue Gray, who led an investigation into partygate.

The committee said it would take time to consider the evidence. If it finds Johnson in contempt, it could recommend punishments ranging from an oral apology to suspension from Parliament, though any sanction would have to be approved by the full House of Commons.

A suspension of 10 days or more would allow his constituents in the suburban London seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip to petition for a special election to replace Johnson as a member of Parliament.

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Rivka Gottlieb of the group COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice said the session was “a new low for Boris Johnson.”

“It’s clear he lied when he said to our faces that he’d done ‘all he could’ to protect our loved ones, he lied again when he said the rules hadn’t been broken in No. 10, and he’s lying now when he denies that was the case,” Gottlieb said.

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