Western Mail

‘He’s a charlatan debasing office of PM’ – Bereaved relatives on Johnson’s apology

- LILY FORD AND GEMMA CREW

BEREAVED relatives of people who died with coronaviru­s have called Boris Johnson “a liar and a charlatan debasing the office of Prime Minister” as he insisted he did not know he was breaking his own coronaviru­s rules and offered a “wholeheart­ed apology” to MPs after being fined by police.

The Prime Minister made his apology in the Commons yesterday, saying he was speaking in “all humility” by acknowledg­ing the fine issued over the gathering in No.10 for his birthday in June 2020.

Fran Hall, whose husband Steve Mead died with Covid-19 three weeks after the couple married in 2020, said Mr Johnson is “a man without shame, without morals and without honour”.

“The endless apologies that the Prime Minister gave to the house when he finally stood up half an hour late to make his statement mean nothing to me – nor do they mean anything to him,” Ms Hall, 61, from Buckingham­shire, told the PA news agency.

“He is a liar whose lies slip easily from his mouth. He will never resign. We depend completely on the backbench Tory MPs to finally decide that he is a liability rather than a leader.

“Until then, we have a liar and a charlatan debasing the office of Prime Minister.”

Ms Hall’s husband was a retired police officer whom she described as a “an honourable, decent man, who believed in justice”.

“And now he is dead, while this lying man stands without shame at the despatch box refusing to do the right thing and resign,” she said.

“Yesterday was 18 months of living without Steve.

“I have the huge misfortune to be a citizen of a country where all decency is ebbing away, and my grief and the grief of hundreds of thousands of others is disregarde­d and ignored by the man paying lip service to honour. I despair.”

Kathryn de Prudhoe, whose father Tony Clay died with Covid-19 in April 2020, said Mr Johnson’s apology “doesn’t go nearly far enough”.

“My family suffered two devastatin­g Covid-19 deaths in a period of seven months while these parties were taking place in Downing Street,” she told PA.

“My dad died alone and there were five people allowed at his 20-minute funeral.”

The 47-year-old, from Leeds, called Mr Johnson’s defence that he did not realise he was breaking the rules an “absurd excuse” and “insulting”.

“We’re ordinary people but we knew the rules and we stuck to them, even in trauma and grief,” she said.

“To then hear him conflate the issue with Ukraine is exactly the sort of, ‘I’m sorry, but look how great I am’ non-apology I’ve come to expect from him.

“He has no authority to lead and nothing but his resignatio­n will do.”

Susie Crozier-Flintham, 45, criticised Mr Johnson for the “disrespect given to the British public, but particular­ly to the bereaved and the ones that we lost”.

Her father, Howard Crozier, a care home resident with dementia and Parkinson’s disease, died in hospital during the first national lockdown.

The 81-year-old was being treated for pneumonia in March 2020 but caught coronaviru­s after a patient with the virus was admitted on to his ward.

His daughter described him as a “full of life character” whom she shared laughter and jokes with and who “wasn’t a man who was waiting to die”.

During his final days in hospital, she was only able to see her “frightened” father for 10 minutes at a time, in full PPE, which she said was “harrowing”.

Mrs Crozier-Flintham, from Sunderland, told the PA news agency: “He needs to go, there needs to be an investigat­ion. If he stays in post it’s like being gaslit, gaslit in a moment of intense grief.”

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