Deutsche Welle (English edition)

UK watchdog probes financing of PM Johnson's home makeover

The UK's Electoral Commission says it has launched a formal investigat­ion into the financing of a lavish makeover of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Downing Street apartment.

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Britain's Electoral Commission on Wednesday said it had launched a formal investigat­ion into how Prime Minister Boris Johnson paid for an expensive makeover of his Downing Street home.

Johnson has faced repeated questions over the funding of the luxurious refurbishm­ent, for which the wallpaper reportedly cost 840 pounds (€965, $1,160) per roll.

Questions on use of political donations

The commission is seeking to establish whether funds used to pay for the renovation should have been declared under legislatio­n on political donations.

"We are now satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that an offense or offenses may have occurred. We will therefore continue this work as a formal investigat­ion to establish whether this is the case," the commission said.

The elections watchdog has the powers to demand the repayment of questionab­le donations, levy fines, or even refer investigat­ions to the police.

It said it had arrived at its decision after communicat­ing with Johnson's Conservati­ve party over the past month.

While ministers have said Johnson has paid for the refurbishm­ent, it remains unclear whether he did so only after questions were asked. The upfront costs are believed to have been paid by the party itself.

Johnson's former adviser Dominic Cummings last Friday said Johnson had wanted donors to pay for the renovation secretly.

Cummings, who left Downing Street last year in an acrimoniou­s split, said he had told the prime minister such plans were "unethical, foolish, possibly illegal."

PM denies 'bodies' allegation

Meanwhile on Wednesday, Johnson denied in parliament that he had said in October that he would rather bodies piled "high in their thousands" than order a third coronaviru­s lockdown.

The prime minister was asked by opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer whether he made the comments. Johnson, who ultimately did order a new lockdown in January, told parliament "No," and demanded that Starmer substantia­te the allegation­s.

The claim was carried by the Daily Mail newspaper on Monday, with various other news outlets confirming the quotes from multiple unnamed sources.

rc/nm (AFP, Reuters)

 ??  ?? Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson walks out of the door at number 10 Downing Street
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson walks out of the door at number 10 Downing Street

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