Western Mail

No.10 hits out at ‘distortion’ as pressure grows on PM

- DAVID HUGHES newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

DOWNING Street has not denied claims that Boris Johnson told aides he would rather let coronaviru­s “rip” than impose a lockdown last year but said the Prime Minister’s actions were being distorted.

The Prime Minister is facing mounting allegation­s about his conduct and handling of the pandemic following a public spat with former adviser Dominic Cummings.

A growing number of sources were reported to have told how Mr Johnson said he was prepared to let “bodies pile high” rather than order a third shutdown, an accusation which the Prime Minister has branded as “total rubbish” and which No.10 denied.

But Downing Street officials were less clear on a Times report that Mr Johnson told aides in September that he would rather let coronaviru­s “rip” than impose a second lockdown because of the economic harm further restrictio­ns would cause.

He was reported to have argued during a Government debate in September that lockdowns were “mad” as he raised concerns about the impact on the economy.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “I have seen the various reports and speculatio­n which distort the actions of the Prime Minister.

“At all times he has been focused on saving lives and livelihood­s.”

The words do not amount to a denial, unlike No.10’s strong rejection of the suggestion Mr Johnson said in October he would rather see “bodies pile high” than announce a third lockdown.

In relation to those alleged remarks, the spokesman said: “He didn’t say it and this is untrue.”

Mr Johnson announced a second lockdown in the autumn, followed by a third in January as cases soared.

Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey backed Mr Johnson and No.10 in the denial of the “bodies” comment, saying she was not aware of any politician who had said “anything like that” as she insisted the public was focused on the pandemic and the roadmap out of lockdown.

“The Prime Minister says he didn’t say them, and he said that yesterday, I think to Sky, so I take the Prime Minister on his word,” she told Sky News.

“I’m not aware that any politician has said anything like that, or indeed any other person that I’m aware of.

“There’s an element here about trying to keep on with the main task at hand. We’ve got through this challengin­g time, we’re still not out of it, that’s why we’re still encouragin­g people to take up their vaccines.”

Labour’s shadow health secretary, Jonathan Ashworth, said it was upsetting to those who have lost loved ones, telling ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “The remarks are sickening, they are disgusting, they are crass, they are wrong.”

Meanwhile, Ms Coffey defended the refurbishm­ent of the Prime Minister’s flat in Number 11 and said it was “no surprise” that he wanted to make changes, after reports of how he paid for it surfaced.

Downing Street and the Tories declined to deny an ITV report stating that the Conservati­ve Campaign Headquarte­rs paid the Cabinet Office to cover initial costs of the refurbishm­ents, with Mr Johnson now repaying the party. The swirl of allegation­s around the Prime Minister come with him embroiled in a public row with Mr Cummings, who until last year was his senior adviser in No.10.

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