The Southland Times

Tory revolt grows over Cummings dilemma

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More than 35 Tory MPs, including former Cabinet ministers, called for Dominic Cummings to resign yesterday, after claiming they had been contacted by hundreds of angry constituen­ts over his alleged breaches of lockdown.

Boris Johnson’s hopes of quelling public anger over his aide’s conduct were in jeopardy as opinion polls showed a sharp fall in support despite Cummings hosting an unpreceden­ted press conference to explain why he travelled to Durham during the lockdown.

Within 24 hours of the press conference, a junior minister became the first to resign over the affair and Cabinet ministers said Cummings should ‘‘step back’’ until a police investigat­ion into his behaviour had concluded.

The Daily Telegraph understand­s that up to six members of the Cabinet have privately told colleagues they believe Cummings should resign.

Jackson Carlaw, the Scottish Tory leader, is among those urging Cummings to consider quitting. Former attorney general Jeremy Wright and Mark Harper, a former chief whip, are also calling for him to go.

Jeremy Hunt, the former health secretary, said he believed Cummings committed a ‘‘clear breach of lockdown rules’’. Although he said he was not calling for the chief adviser to resign, he added that he recognised ‘‘that accountabi­lity is central to our democracy and sometimes people do need to resign’’.

After four days of the issue dominating the political agenda, Matt Hancock said at the daily Downing Street briefing that he understood ‘‘the anger that some people feel’’ over Cummings’s apparent breach of lockdown rules.

The Health Secretary added: ‘‘I can understand why reasonable people can take a different view, but my judgment, which is the same as the prime minister’s judgment, is that what Cummings did was within the guidelines.’’

Earlier in the day, Michael Gove, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, had similarly defended Cummings, saying that people would ‘‘make their own mind up’’ about what the adviser had done but insisting that he had not broken the law or the rules.

However, there was fresh confusion when Hancock promised he would ‘‘look into’’ reviewing all penalty fines imposed on families travelling for childcare purposes during the lockdown.

The health secretary’s response to a question from a vicar during yesterday’s press conference prompted a clarificat­ion from government sources later in the evening who stressed that fines would not, in fact, be overturned.

Growing numbers of Tory backbenche­rs urged the prime minister to set up an independen­t inquiry into Cummings’s trip to Durham as they said trust in the Conservati­ves was draining away over the affair. Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the 1922 committee, held a meeting of its five most senior officers yesterday.

He has been asked by backbenche­rs to demand No 10 sanctions an inquiry.

Opinion polls carried out after

Cummings’s appearance – and two press conference­s from the prime minister – showed that approval ratings for both Johnson and the Government have plummeted.

Johnson’s own ratings have plunged by 20 per centage points in just four days and are now in negative figures for the first time.

The prime minister suffered the first resignatio­n over the Cummings affair when Douglas Ross, a junior Scotland

Office minister, announced he was quitting because he was unconvince­d by Cummings’s explanatio­n.

Despite last-ditch phone calls from both Johnson and Cummings urging him to stay, the Moray MP said he resigned as his constituen­ts had made huge sacrifices sticking to the ‘‘stay home’’ guidance. Amid fears the public will stop listening to the Government’s public health messages Ross said: ‘‘I cannot in good faith tell them that they were all wrong and one senior adviser to the Government was right.’’

A second minister told The Telegraph they had taken soundings from friends as to whether they should resign, adding: ‘‘This is going to be very, very damaging and I really am sick of it.’’

With at least 38 Tory MPs – almost double Tuesday’s number – calling for Cummings to be sacked or resign, and party sources saying dozens more privately agree, Johnson’s 80-seat majority would be under threat should they mount a full-scale rebellion. – Telegraph Group

 ?? AP ?? Dominic Cummings, right, the top aide to Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, is given a police escort as he leaves his north London home.
AP Dominic Cummings, right, the top aide to Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, is given a police escort as he leaves his north London home.

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