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Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2022 10:04 pm
by kreuzberger
I have scraped this from beneath the Telegraph's latest paywalled offering.

TL;DR Et tu Barclé?


Downing Street staff drank alcohol into the early hours at two leaving events the night before Prince Philip’s socially-distanced funeral, The Telegraph can reveal.

On the evening of Friday Apr 16 2021, Britain was in a period of public mourning. Union flags on Government buildings across Westminster hung at half mast to mark the passing of Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth II's husband, the previous week.

With the country in step two of a strict lockdown roadmap, which barred indoor mixing, mourners were told not to leave flowers due to the Covid threat. A book of condolence was set up online to “reduce the risk of transmission” from physical signings.

In a private chapel in Windsor Castle the Prince’s coffin lay overnight. The next day the Queen, her face covered by a black mask, would say farewell to her husband of 73 years. With social distancing rules in force, she sat alone.

The atmosphere in Downing Street that Friday evening, however, was quite different. Advisers and civil servants gathered after work for two separate events to mark the departure of two colleagues.

One was James Slack, Mr Johnson’s director of communications. He had served two Tory prime ministers, a rare carry-over from the Theresa May days, but was leaving after four years to become deputy editor at The Sun newspaper. The other was one of Mr Johnson’s personal photographers.

'Undeniably parties'

Eye-witnesses have talked to The Telegraph about what happened. It is alleged that excessive booze was drunk, while at points, guests danced along to music. The gatherings stretched late into the night - well beyond midnight, according to one source.

They were, according to one who was there, undeniably parties.

The revelation of the boozy gatherings at the heart of the Government the night before the Duke's funeral is problematic, not just because of the context of public grief, but because of the clearly-defined Covid restrictions then in place.

The Government’s own guidance read: “You must not socialise indoors except with your household or support bubble. You can meet outdoors, including in gardens, in groups of six people or two households.”

Any defence will likely rely on the argument that the gatherings were for work rather than socialising - a claim that is now being scrutinised by Sue Gray, the civil servant looking into an ever-expanding list of lockdown-breaking party claims.

Boris Johnson was not in Downing Street that day, according to a No 10 spokesman. He had departed for Chequers, the Prime Minister’s country house, on Thursday evening and stayed there through to Saturday.

According to those in Downing Street that evening, the two gatherings were firstly held in different parts of the complex, before joining together as the night wore on. Around 30 people attended both gatherings combined, according to one present.

Mr Slack finished work for the last time in Downing Street, stood and thanked a group of press advisers and aides in a farewell speech. Some had worked with him for years through a tumultuous period in Downing Street - not least on trying to deliver Brexit. Some colleagues joined the celebration via video links.

Alcohol was opened up - as it often was on Friday evenings in No 10 over the preceding year, according to multiple Government sources - and eventually the group migrated out to the Downing Street garden.

The second gathering for the departing photographer - attended mainly by younger members of staff - spent much of the evening in the No 10 basement. The room beneath the main suite of offices on the ground floor had limited ventilation - the type of environment scientists say increases the risk of spreading coronavirus.

Someone was sent to the Co-op on the Strand, a busy street nearby, with a suitcase which was then filled with bottles of wine and brought back to Downing Street, according to one person at the gathering that night.

In the basement, there is said to have been a party atmosphere. A laptop had been placed on a photocopier and music was blaring out.

Shelley Williams-Walker, Mr Johnson's head of operations, was in charge of the music at points, according to one eye-witness.

The claim was on Thursday put to Downing Street, where Ms Williams-Walker still works. No denial has been issued.

She was jokingly nicknamed “DJ SWW”, a reference to her initials, according to one present that night.

As the evening wore on, the alcohol still flowing, those celebrating the photographer’s departure headed to the Downing Street garden.

'Too much wine spilling on No 10's basement carpet'

One present said there was a fear that too much wine was spilling on the basement carpet as they danced. They are said to have relocated at around midnight.

In the garden, the two groups marking the departure of Mr Slack and the photographer are said to have merged.

The drinking and chatting allegedly carried on into the early hours of the morning. One Downing Street figure had a go on a child's swing belonging to Wilf Johnson, the Prime Minister's son, according to one eyewitness, and broke it.

The gathering is the first allegation of lockdown-breaking in Downing Street in 2021 to have emerged, marking a new front in the row engulfing the Prime Minister. Previous party allegations date from 2020.

In 2021, the country faced some form of restrictions for seven months, starting with a full lockdown in January and ending with a lifting of almost all Covid rules in July.

On Apr 16, England was in the second step of Mr Johnson’s four-stage “road map” out of full lockdown. Mixing indoors was barred except for within one household. Outdoors people could only meet in groups of six, or two households.

In a sign that some in the Downing Street building understood the importance of sticking to the rules, one senior figure there at the time told The Telegraph they had cautioned against holding a leaving do for Mr Slack. The advice ultimately was not taken.

A No 10 spokesperson said of Mr Slack’s farewell event: “On this individual’s last day he gave a farewell speech to thank each team for the work they had done to support him, both those who had to be in the office for work and on a screen for those working from home.”

The spokesperson declined to comment on the photographer’s leaving do.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2022 10:08 pm
by Oboogie
Johnson will detail one of his staff to investigate and establish that no laws - or "guidelines" as he was calling them at PMQs - were broken.
And the MET will say there's no evidence.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 12:49 am
by MisterMuncher
Et Tu, Barclé is right.

The article is *not* paywalled. That's not an accident

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 8:41 am
by Andy McDandy
Several papers already reporting how Gray's enquiry will pan out. Almost as if someone knows something.

Johnson to be "censured" (yet again) for his poor understanding of the rules (not laws), a "farcical" culture among some junior staff, not enough oversight from the responsible adults. No laws broken but hey, we get that it looks bad.

Little boys did it and ran away*.

*Got fired.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 9:20 am
by Oboogie
Now we know that No 10 were pissed most of the time, the COVID response and Brexit start to make more sense.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 9:42 am
by Andy McDandy
The other was one of Mr Johnson’s personal photographers.
I hate to ask the obvious, but HOW MANY PERSONAL FUCKING PHOTOGRAPHERS DOES ANYONE NEED???

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 9:49 am
by Crabcakes
I can see this being set up as the junior staff taking the blame. So it will be interesting to see (a) how Johnson pissing off - and firing - a whole host of people while simultaneously still clinging on to his job despite him being at the exact same events as them goes over, and (b) whether enough of the public will buy that he has no idea what goes on in his own house (and regardless, that he presided over a group of people who didn't at any time see this as blatantly unacceptable).

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 11:00 am
by Malcolm Armsteen
I think a Greywash will backfire.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 12:25 pm
by Oboogie
Malcolm Armsteen wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 11:00 am I think a Greywash will backfire.
But that will only matter if it motivates sufficient Tory backbenchers to write letters.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 2:31 pm
by mattomac
I’m with Malcolm, anything less than a blame on all parties is going go down badly.

Anyhow good to see the latest one connects the Sun 🤣

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 5:47 pm
by kreuzberger
Andy McDandy wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 9:42 am HOW MANY PERSONAL FUCKING PHOTOGRAPHERS DOES ANYONE NEED???
It all make sense when you consider that his base ignore the detail and are only interested in looking at the pictures.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 6:21 pm
by Bones McCoy
Andy McDandy wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 9:42 am
The other was one of Mr Johnson’s personal photographers.
I hate to ask the obvious, but HOW MANY PERSONAL FUCKING PHOTOGRAPHERS DOES ANYONE NEED???
With such an untrustworthy PM, I want every bloody minute on camera.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 6:31 pm
by Oboogie
kreuzberger wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 5:47 pm It all make sense when you consider that his base ignore the detail and are only interested in looking at the pictures.
Be fair, they don't just look at the pictures, they do enjoy colouring them in too.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 6:48 pm
by Watchman
I thought it was fapping material

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 6:52 pm
by Samanfur
Did we know that the Deputy Assistant Commissioner of the Met is Sajid Javid's younger brother?

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 6:57 pm
by Watchman
That is a serious “you’re joking” moment

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 7:01 pm
by Samanfur

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 7:24 pm
by Malcolm Armsteen
Image

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2022 2:16 pm
by mattomac
Samanfur wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 7:01 pm No, I'm not.

He's DAC for Professional Standards.
Professional standards :lol:

Yup makes even more sense now.

Re: Criminal Behaviour in Downing Street

Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2022 3:12 pm
by kreuzberger
Listening to BBC Any Answers and the desolation of some of the callers' contributions, it is absolutely heartbreaking what these bastards have done.