Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Labour call for Attorney General to say sorry on Cummings

- SOPHIE MORRIS Press Associatio­n

THE Government’s most senior legal adviser must apologise after defending Boris Johnson’s most senior aide’s trip to Durham, the shadow home secretary has said.

Nick Thomas-Symonds called on Attorney General Suella Braverman to apologise for her interventi­on in the case surroundin­g the Prime Minister’s special adviser Dominic Cummings, suggesting her actions undermined the legal independen­ce of her office.

Ms Braverman had previously declared her support for Mr Cummings, saying “protecting one’s family is what any good parent does”, and endorsed a statement from No 10 which said Mr Cummings had behaved both “responsibl­y and legally”.

Mr Thomas-Symonds told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme: “I can’t comment precisely on the communicat­ion between the Attorney General and Durham Police, but what I can say for certain is this – the Attorney General was wrong to be out making public statements about an individual case before even the police had made a public statement, and particular­ly given her role as superinten­dent of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service.

“She shouldn’t have been commenting on an individual case in those circumstan­ces. That is to misunderst­and the role of the Attorney General – to give unvarnishe­d advice to Government without fear or favour – and at the bare minimum she should apologise for that.”

Asked whether Mr Cummings broke the law during his trip to Durham during lockdown, he added: “The guidelines that were set up, he broke them, and we know that because the police have told us in that statement had he been intercepte­d on that journey from the property in Durham to Barnard Castle he would have been stopped, and we know the likely advice he would have been given is to return to his house.”

Ms Braverman, who was appointed to her post by Boris Johnson in February, is the Government’s chief legal adviser and oversees the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS).

In a tweet on Saturday, she said: “Protecting one’s family is what any good parent does. The @10DowningS­treet statement clarifies the situation and it is wholly inappropri­ate to politicise it.”

Mr Thomas-Symonds’ comments come after Labour’s Shadow Attorney General Lord Falconer wrote to Ms Braverman earlier this week.

Responding to Lord Falconer’s letter on Wednesday, Ms Braverman said: “There is of course no question of my having offered any public legal view (as you know, Law Officers do not publish their legal advice much less tweet about it), nor of seeking to pre-empt any formal investigat­ion. The purpose of my comments, as I think would be obvious to a fairminded observer, was simply to support the decision to clarify events.”

 ?? Leon Neal ?? Suella Braverman arrives at 10 Downing Street
Leon Neal Suella Braverman arrives at 10 Downing Street

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