Wales On Sunday

Warning to hand in Boris flat info

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CONSERVATI­VE Party staff have been given one week to hand over all communicat­ion related to renovation­s of Boris Johnson’s flat in 11 Downing Street or face criminal consequenc­es, according to reports.

Separate inquiries into how the redecorati­on work was funded are being carried out by the head of the Civil Service Simon Case, the independen­t adviser on ministers’ interests Lord Geidt, and the Electoral Commission.

The Times and The Sun reported all Conservati­ve Party staff received an email from human resources in the name of Alan Mabbutt, a senior official and registered legal officer, about the Commission’s inquiry which told them: “You are put on notice that this is a criminal investigat­ion.”

The email instructed that all communicat­ions had to be provided to the investigat­ion by May 7.

The Times added that Mr Mabbutt said if staff “knowingly falsify, conceal, destroy or otherwise dispose of informatio­n” then they “could be committing a criminal offence of perverting the course of justice”.

Mr Johnson looked to shift attention away from the controvers­y as he insisted he was “laser-focused” on delivering the country’s priorities after the parliament­ary session came to an end on Thursday.

But Labour MP Dame Margaret Hodge, who chaired the Public Accounts Committee spending watchdog, asked the Parliament­ary Commission­er for Standards to investigat­e his conduct over the flat revamp.

The Prime Minister has insisted the row over refurbishm­ents to the flat where he lives with fiancee Carrie Symonds is a “farrago of nonsense”, adding: “I don’t think there’s anything to see here.”

He says he “personally” paid for the renovation­s but has refused to say whether he received an initial donation from the Conservati­ve Party to cover the costs.

The coverage about the flat does not, according to YouGov, appear to have damaged the Prime Minister in the eyes of the voters, with the Tories extending their lead over Labour from 10 to 11 points this week despite polling showing only 14% of the public had not heard about the issue.

It was also revealed Mr Johnson’s phone number has been freely available on the internet for 15 years, having been published in a think tank press release and never deleted.

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