Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Raab: No 10 party would have been breach of rules

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DEPUTY Prime Minister Dominic Raab has said it would have been a clear breach of Covid rules at the time if Boris Johnson’s staff held a party in No 10 in the run-up to last Christmas.

Boris Johnson has not denied reports that members of his Downing Street team staged a party on December 18 last year when London was under Tier 3 restrictio­ns but has insisted that no rules were broken.

However Mr Raab, pictured, who is also the Justice Secretary, said he did not know the truth of the reports based on “unsubstant­iated claims all on the basis of anonymous sources”, but if they turned out to be correct, then there would have been a breach.

“Until there is something substantia­ted, until it is more than anonymous sources, I think we are chasing shadows,” he told the BBC’s The Andrew Marr Show.

“If there is a breach of the rules, there is a breach of the rules.

“But I don’t know the full facts because I wasn’t there.

“Of course, if there was a formal party held, of course that is something that is clearly contrary to the guidance.

“If anyone held a party that it is contrary to the rules, of course that is the wrong thing to do.

“If something unsubstant­iated from anonymous sources actually materialis­ed, then of course it would be wrong.”

His interventi­on will pile pressure on Mr Johnson to explain what exactly went on in Downing Street last year, something he has repeatedly refused to do.

Last week The Daily Mirror reported that two events took place in No 10 last year in the run-up to the festive season.

The first was said to have been a leaving do for a senior aide held in November, when the country was in a second national lockdown, attended by Mr Johnson, who gave a speech.

The second was reportedly a staff party in December where, according to multiple reports, party games were played, food and drink were served and the revelries went on past midnight.

The rules in place in the capital at the time explicitly banned work Christmas lunches and parties where it is “a primarily social activity and is not otherwise permitted”.

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