Daily Mail

NOW IT’S SLIPPERY STARMER IN CRISIS

First he fails to win back Red Wall. Then police launch investigat­ion into his beer and curry night – just like the probe that led him to piously demand Boris’s head

- By Jason Groves, Glen Keogh and Richard Marsden

KEIR Starmer’s leadership was in crisis last night after police launched an investigat­ion into ‘Beer gate’.

Durham Constabula­ry said they were opening a fresh inquiry into the notorious event when Sir Keir was filmed enjoying a late-night beer with party activists during lockdown.

The move is a humiliatio­n for the Labour leader, who called on Boris Johnson to resign in January after police launched an inquiry into claims of lockdown busting events in no 10.

in a tweet, he said: ‘Honesty and decency matter. He needs to do the decent thing and resign.’ Sir

Keir ignored questions yesterday about whether he would adhere to his own standards and quit – insisting only that he had not broken the rules.

But a Cabinet source said Sir Keir had been ‘hoist by his own petard’, adding: ‘Who would have guessed that the holier-than-thou saint would turn out to be a total hypocrite?’

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries told the Daily Mail: ‘For three months, he attempted to divert the Government’s attention away from important and pressing issues such as the cost of living and the war in Ukraine by continuous­ly calling for the PM to resign for nothing more than being investigat­ed.

‘Do his inappropri­ate and repeatedly shrill-voiced standards apply to himself as well?’

One Labour backbenche­r branded Sir Kier’s actions in Durham ‘indefensib­le’ – telling Politics Joe they would refuse media interviews to avoid having to defend the party’s embattled leader.

A political adviser to Sir Keir added: ‘It’s a relief Durham police aren’t handing out retrospect­ive fines. Because we would probably get one.’

Yesterday’s police interventi­on follows a string of revelation­s by the Mail about what really happened when Sir Keir gathered with MPs and officials in Durham Miners Hall on the night of April 30 last year.

Durham Constabula­ry said last night the force had received ‘significan­t new informatio­n’. The body blow for the Labour leader came as:

Sir Keir’s dream of an electoral breakthrou­gh fell flat as Labour failed to make significan­t gains in the crucial Red Wall councils;

Mr Johnson pledged a new focus on the cost of living after the Tories lost almost 400 seats on a ‘tough’ night for the Government.

The Lib Dems struck fear into southern Tories by claiming a string of victories;

Durham police faced questions about why they delayed their bombshell announceme­nt until after the elections;

Disgraced former Labour mayor Lutfur Rahman was reelected as mayor of Tower Hamlets after a five-year elec would tions ban over vote-rigging;

Labour tightened its grip on the capital, seizing flagship Tory councils in Wandsworth, Westminste­r and Barnet.

Last week this newspaper revealed that, despite denials stretching back three months, Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner was also present at the drinks in the Miners Hall.

Mrs Rayner, who also called for the PM to quit following the launch of the Partygate probe, is now likely to face questions from the police and face pressure to resign. The police initially rejected calls to investigat­e after reviewing a 43-second video filmed by a passer-by.

But in a statement yesterday, the force said: ‘Following the receipt of significan­t new informatio­n over recent days, Durham Constabula­ry... can confirm that an investigat­ion into potential breaches of Covid-19 regulation­s relating to this gathering is now being conducted.’

Labour said Sir Keir, Mrs Rayner and others present co-operate with detectives. In a brief statement to reporters, a shell-shocked Sir Keir said: ‘I understand the police need to do their job, we need to let them get on with that but I’m confident there was no breach of the rules.’

Privately, Labour insiders acknowledg­ed that Sir Keir might have to resign if he is fined, having repeatedly called for the PM and Rishi Sunak to quit when they were fined £50 over a brief so-called ‘birthday party’ in the Cabinet room.

One Labour MP said the decision by Sir Keir and Mrs Rayner to push so hard for the PM to quit had ‘come back to bite them’.

Tory MP Richard Holden, who led calls for police to reopen their investigat­ion, declined to call explicitly for the Labour leader to quit, but said: ‘Keir Starmer should hold himself to the same moral standards he has talked about. It should be his words that hang him.’

Fellow Tory Graham Stuart said: ‘It’s the po-faced, selfregard­ing, smug naked hypocrisy of Starmer on Partygate that makes his comeuppanc­e so satisfying.’

TO hear Sir Keir Starmer’s incessant, pious denunciati­ons of Boris Johnson over lockdown breaches, one might have imagined Labour’s leader inhabited a higher moral universe than the Prime Minister.

These scathing attacks – afforded extra gravitas because they were from an exdirector of public prosecutio­ns – served one purpose: To convince Britain that Mr Johnson was unfit to hold the highest office.

Indeed, on January 31 this year, after it emerged the police were investigat­ing illegal parties in No10, he couldn’t have been more emphatic. Boris, he raged, ought to ‘do the decent thing and resign’.

Yet while spewing indignatio­n, he knew that he and his deputy Angela Rayner had themselves enjoyed a curry and beer kneesup in Durham with a gaggle of activists when indoor socialisin­g was against the law.

Today, Sir Keir finds himself hoisted by his own petard. Police have announced a criminal probe into Beergate.

Thanks to evidence uncovered by the Mail, detectives will examine ‘significan­t new informatio­n’ about the bash.

Sir Keir’s insistence that he and his team were working is deeply implausibl­e. Where’s the proof? It was 10pm on a Friday night for goodness sake. And if it was so innocent, why has he spent days lying and dissemblin­g about the truth?

His pained supporters say we should not jump to conclusion­s before the investigat­ion is completed. But he didn’t give Boris that courtesy.

To many, a police probe into beer-swigging is an absurd waste of time and money. But Labour’s leader made a rod for his own back with his hysterical witch-hunt seeking to topple the Mr Johnson and Chancellor Rishi Sunak over similar breaches.

So today we ask hypocritic­al, deceitful Sir Keir – who demanded the PM resign in the same situation – will he be judging himself by the same high standards?

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