The Scotsman

SNP presses for Cabinet Office inquiry into Cummings’ breach of Covid-19 rules

● Blackford speaks out on ‘a real sense of indignatio­n’ ● Deputy CMO Harries says lockdown rules ‘are for all of us’

- By JANE BRADLEY

The SNP has pressed for a Cabinet Office inquiry into Dominic Cummings’ breach of lockdown rules, saying that the Prime Minister’s senior adviser must not be “completely unaccounta­ble” for his rulebreaki­ng.

In a letter to the Cabinet Secretary ahead of the Parliament returning tomorrow, SNP Westminste­r leader Ian Blackford has said the confirmati­on by Durham Police that there was a breach of the regulation­s – added to Mr Cummings’ admitted wider breaches of the UK government guidance – meant there wasaclearn­eedforanin­quiry.

The letter comes as deputy chief medical officer Jenny Harries was asked at yesterday’s UK Government briefing whether she agreed with comments made by another deputy CMO, Professor Jonathan Van Tam, who had said the rules “should apply to all”.

Ms Harries said: “Absolutely. As a matter of personal and profession­al integrity, I will always try to follow the rules... they are all rules for all of us.”

Mr Cummings has been engulfed in controvers­y since it was revealed he travelled 260 miles from London to his parents’ farm in Durham because he suspected he and his wife may have had coronaviru­s.

The couple and their fouryear-old son also took a 50 mile round trip to Barnard Castle after the Downing Street aide had recovered from his illness, with Mr Cummings claiming the trip was to check his eyesight before the return trip to London. He has insisted that the trip was a “safeguardi­ng” issue relating to his young son, amid fears that the couple may have felt too ill to look after him and revealed that his young nieces, who also live on the farm, had agreed to step in, although that had not been necessary.

Durham Police said last week “there might have been a minor breach of the regulation­s that would have warranted police interventi­on”.

They added: “Durham Constabula­ry view this as minor because there was no apparent breach of social distancing.”

However, the police said that they do not pursue retrospect­ive action against any individual found to have breached lockdown regulation­s but that if Mr Cummings had been stopped by an officer while travelling to Barnard Castle he would have been advised to return home.

Prime Minister Boris Johnston has insisted that Mr Cummings behaved “responsibl­y and legally and with integrity” and has called for the matter to be brought to a close. But Mr Blackford said: “Dominic Cummings must not be left completely unaccounta­ble for his actions. No matter how exceptiona­l he thinks he is, there cannot be one rule for Tory advisers and another for everyone else.

“There is a real sense of indignatio­n that Boris Johnson has refused to take his responsibi­lities as Prime Minister seriously and failed to remove Mr Cummings from post, severely underminin­g trust in the UK government and its public health guidance.”

He said the SNP was still being “flooded with messages” from constituen­ts about the issue.

He said: “The Prime Minister has a duty to maintain public confidence in the rules, not underminet­heminthemi­ddle of a global pandemic. The success of test, trace and isolate, and wider efforts to keep the infection rate down and save lives, depends on public compliance.

“Leading public health experts and the police have warned that this scandal has undermined public trust.

Polling shows two-thirds think people will be less likely to obey the rules and there is evidence that they are already being broken as a result.”

He added: “No one should be above the rules. If the Prime Minister won’t act, then there must be a Cabinet Office inquiry into the rule-breaking and the cover-up, and Parliament must find ways to hold Mr Cummings to account. Otherwise people will think this is the establishm­ent protecting itself.

“SNP MPS will continue to voice the concerns of our constituen­ts on this scandal and press Boris Johnson to repair the damage he has done to public health.”

Mr Cummings held a press conference last week, where he answered accusation­s about his breach of the rules.

He is not the first high profile government figure to be found in breach of lockdown rules.

Last month, Professor Neil Ferguson resigned as an adviser after he broke lockdown rules to meet his lover.

And Catherine Calderwood, Scotland’s Chief Medical Officer, quit after beingphoto­graphed bythe Scottish Sun newspaper ignoring her own advice by making two trips from Edinburgh to her second home in Fife.

“There might have been a minor breach of the regulation­s [but we] view this as minor because there was no apparent breach of social distancing”

DURHAM CONSTABULA­RY

 ??  ?? Above: No10 special adviser Dominic Cummings leaves his home in north London yesterday. Above right: Labour MP Rosie Duffield, who has quit her frontbench role. Right: Ian Blackford
Above: No10 special adviser Dominic Cummings leaves his home in north London yesterday. Above right: Labour MP Rosie Duffield, who has quit her frontbench role. Right: Ian Blackford

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