The Mail on Sunday

KEIR STARMER’S BEERGATE STORY BLOWN APART BY LEAKED MEMO

Confidenti­al file from inside Labour HQ reveals full hypocrisy of leader’s endless calls for PM to resign

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

KEIR STARMER has been plunged into a full-scale leadership crisis after The Mail on Sunday obtained a secret Labour Party document which appears to shatter his version of events over ‘Beergate’.

An operationa­l note drawn up ahead of Sir Keir’s notorious visit to Durham, where he was filmed enjoying a late-night beer with activists, reveals the gathering had been planned in advance. The bombshell document, marked ‘private and confidenti­al’, also calls into serious doubt Sir Keir’s claim that he returned to work after the beers and takeaway curries.

After the entry recording the ‘dinner in Miners Hall’ – which includes a note to ‘arrange takeaway from Spice Lounge’, a local curry house – the document simply says: ‘End of visit.’

The dramatic revelation follows the announceme­nt by Durham Constabula­ry on Friday that it was opening a fresh investigat­ion into the event on April 30 last year, which took place when indoor socialisin­g was illegal. The inquiry comes after a series

of revelation­s in the Daily Mail. The memo – which was passed to this newspaper by a whistleblo­wer – also further undermines Labour’s claims that it made ‘an honest mistake’ when it denied that Deputy Leader Angela Rayner was at the event: it lists ‘AR’ alongside ‘KS’ as the two senior politician­s anchoring the day’s proceeding­s.

The Labour leader – who is also under pressure from party members over his failure to make a significan­t UK-wide breakthrou­gh in last week’s local elections – is facing accusation­s of hypocrisy, having called for Boris Johnson’s resignatio­n in January when Scotland Yard launched its inquiry into claims of No10 lockdown-breaking.

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries said last night: ‘Being investigat­ed or receiving a fixed-penalty notice is not a resigning matter for anyone at all – unless of course you’ve daily argued the case that it is just that and repeatedly called for the resignatio­n of others. He’s bang to rights and has no choice but to resign thanks to his own sanctimoni­ous hypocrisy.’

Labour has tried to draw a distinctio­n between ‘Beergate’ and ‘Partygate’ on the grounds that Sir Keir’s event was not premeditat­ed: when Sir Keir’s transport spokeswoma­n Louise Haigh was asked by the BBC’s Fiona Bruce on Thursday

‘He’s bang to rights and has no choice but to resign’

how the beer and curry evening was different to a gathering in Downing Street, she said: ‘There was a big difference... he [Keir] broke to eat, and then carried on working afterwards.

‘The various parties in Downing Street were pre-arranged, social events.’

But the note – a forward-planning logistics document which is referred to as an ‘op note’ – makes clear the beer and curry night had been planned in advance.

The note says that after a day’s campaignin­g in Hartlepool, Sir Keir’s team were due to arrive at the Radisson Blu hotel in Durham at 6.31pm, leaving by 7pm to walk to the Miners Hall.

After recording clips for the media, the note says a 1hr 20mins slot was set aside for ‘dinner in Miners Hall with Mary Foy’, the local Durham MP. A side note reads: ‘YS to arrange takeaway from Spice Lounge’. YS is the acronym for a member of Sir Keir’s private office.

The Spice Lounge curry house was closed at the time, with callers being referred to the nearby Capital Indian restaurant. Last week, the Daily Mail spoke to one of the restaurant’s delivery drivers, who said he had dropped off a ‘big’ order of food for at least 15 people, including four bags of curries, rice and naan bread.

Sir Keir has insisted the curries were eaten during a break in work. When asked whether he had returned to work after the beer, the Labour leader said: ‘Yes. And the idea that nobody works at 10 o’clock at night is absurd.’ But the memo sets out that at the end of the dinner, at 10pm, he should ‘walk from Miners Hall to Radisson Blu’. Further work is not mentioned.

When he was quizzed on ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme last week, Sir Keir said: ‘At some point, this was in the evening, everybody’s hungry and then that takeaway was ordered. It was then delivered into the kitchen.

‘Restaurant­s and pubs were closed, so takeaways were really the only way you could eat. So this was brought in and at various points people went through the kitchen, got a plate, had some food to eat and got on with their work.’

However, The Mail on Sunday has establishe­d that the Radisson Blu was serving food when Sir Keir and his party checked in at 6.31pm and continued to do so until 9pm.

At the time, lockdown laws allowed staff to meet indoors if doing so was ‘reasonably necessary for work’, but ‘there should not be any sharing of food and drink by staff who do not share a household. Minimise self-serving options for food and drink’. In addition, Government guidance put in place for the following month’s local elections stated: ‘You should not meet with other campaigner­s indoors. Only rarely will two people be required indoors at the same location to manage bulk delivery handling.

‘You should keep these interactio­ns to a minimum to reduce contact and follow the guidance on how to stop the spread of coronaviru­s at all times...’

The document also refers to four members of the ‘MPL’ – Met Police Liaison – who were included in the trip, suggesting they are likely to have informatio­n useful to the investigat­ion. Also included on the op note is the line ‘Covid Alert Level: National Lockdown’, and ‘important note: please maintain social distancing of 2m and wear face coverings whilst indoors at all time’.

The leaked document makes clear that Ms Rayner was to play a central role in the day’s events.

The party has admitted to not telling the truth about Ms Rayner’s presence. When the Mail asked the party on January 14 whether she had taken part in the event, it said: ‘Angela wasn’t there.’ But when

‘There should not be any sharing of food and drink’

confronted last month with video evidence, Labour admitted: ‘Angela was present’, and said previous denials had been ‘an honest mistake’.

A Labour spokesman said: ‘Keir was working, a takeaway was made available in the kitchen, and he ate between work demands. No rules were broken.’ A party source added: ‘During a fast-moving campaign, the op note doesn’t always keep up with events so it would be wrong to assume that activities occurred at the times originally planned. For example, it’s been documented that the takeaway was late.’

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