Huddersfield Daily Examiner

PM insists he has broken no rules

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BORIS JOHNSON has insisted he has not broken any laws over the refurbishm­ent of his Downing Street flat after the Electoral Commission launched a formal investigat­ion.

The watchdog said there are “reasonable grounds” to suspect an offence may have occurred, dramatical­ly deepening the Prime Minister’s troubles over the renovation­s yesterday.

Questions have been mounting since former aide Dominic Cummings accused Mr Johnson of wanting donors to “secretly pay” for the renovation­s to his No 11 residence in a “possibly illegal” move.

Shortly after the commission’s announceme­nt, Mr Johnson told Prime Minister’s Questions in the Commons he “personally” paid for the renovation­s, but refused to answer whether he received an initial loan from the Tory party.

Challenged by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer over the “incredibly serious” developmen­t, Mr Johnson told MPs that “any further declaratio­n that I have to make, if any” will be advised by his newly appointed independen­t adviser on ministers’ interests, Lord Geidt.

Sir Keir pressed the Prime Minister on whether he believes any “rules or laws have been broken” over the refurbishm­ent of the flat. “No, I don’t,” Mr Johnson replied, adding that he has “met the requiremen­ts that I have been obliged to meet in full”.

During the angry exchange in the Commons, the Prime Minister was also forced to deny having said he would rather see “bodies pile high” than impose a third coronaviru­s lockdown.

The questionin­g came less than an hour after the Electoral Commission announced its investigat­ion, having “conducted an assessment” of informatio­n provided by the Conservati­ve Party since contact began late last month.

“We are now satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that an offence or offences may have occurred,” a statement from the watchdog said.

“We will therefore continue this work as a formal investigat­ion to establish whether this is the case.”

Crucially, the watchdog said the investigat­ion will “determine whether any transactio­ns relating” to the renovation­s “fall within the regime regulated by the commission and whether such funding was reported as required”.

“We will provide an update once the investigat­ion is complete. We will not be commenting further until that point,” a spokeswoma­n added.

The Conservati­ve Party said it would “continue to work constructi­vely” with the commission.

“We believe all reportable donations have been transparen­tly and correctly declared and published by the Electoral Commission,” a spokesman said.

The commission can issue fines of up to £20,000, with most offences under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendum­s Act 2000 resulting in a civil sanction.

 ??  ?? Boris Johnson in the Commons yesterday
Boris Johnson in the Commons yesterday

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