Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Johnson aide drawing fire for lockdown trip

Likely infected, adviser visited parents’ home

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON — The British government dug in Saturday to defend Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s top adviser, Dominic Cummings, for traveling more than 250 miles to his parents’ house during a nationwide lockdown at a time when he suspected he had the coronaviru­s.

Opponents demanded Cummings’ resignatio­n after The Guardian and Mirror newspapers revealed he had driven from London to the property in Durham, northeast England, with his wife and son at the end of March. A lockdown that began March 23 stipulated that people should remain at their primary residence, leaving only for essential local errands and exercise, and not visit relatives. Anyone with symptoms was advised told to completely isolate themselves.

Johnson’s office said in a statement that Cummings made the trip because his wife was showing coronaviru­s symptoms, he correctly thought he was likely to also get sick, and relatives had offered to help look after the couple’s 4-year-old son. It said Cummings stayed in a house “near to but separate from” his extended family.

“The prime minister gives Mr. Cummings his full support,” said Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, who was peppered with questions about Cummings’ trip during the government’s daily coronaviru­s news conference.

Shapps said Cummings had followed lockdown rules by “staying in place with his family, which is the right thing to do.”

“This wasn’t visiting a holiday home or going to visit someone,” he said. “This was going to stay put for 14 days, to remain in isolation.”

The two newspapers later reported that Cummings was spotted again in the Durham area on April 19 after he had recovered from the virus and returned to work in London.

Critics of the government expressed outrage that Cummings had broken rules that for two months have prevented Britons from visiting older relatives, comforting dying friends or attending the funerals of loved ones.

The main opposition Labour Party wrote to the head of the civil service to call for an official investigat­ion.

“The British people have made important and painful sacrifices to support the national effort, including being away from family in times of need,” Labour lawmaker Rachel Reeves wrote in the letter. “It is therefore vital that the government can reassure the public that its most senior figures have been adhering to the same rules as everyone else.”

Durham police said that officers went to a house on March 31 and “explained to the family the guidelines around self-isolation and reiterated the appropriat­e advice around essential travel.” Police did not mention Cummings by name.

Asked about the trip by reporters outside his house in London on Saturday, Cummings said “I behaved reasonably and legally.”

“It’s a question of doing the right thing. It’s not about what you guys think,” said Cummings, who also berated the journalist­s for failing to keep 6 feet apart, in line with social distancing rules.

He is one of several British government figures to contract COVID-19, including the prime minister, who spent three nights in intensive care at a London hospital.

Britain’s official death toll among people with the coronaviru­s stands at 36,675 after 282 more deaths were reported Saturday.

 ?? Aaron Chown The Associated Press ?? Dominic Cummings, a senior aide to Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson who has come under fire over a March trip, leaves his home Saturday in north London.
Aaron Chown The Associated Press Dominic Cummings, a senior aide to Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson who has come under fire over a March trip, leaves his home Saturday in north London.
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