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1 Lockdown parties  



1.1  2020  





1.2  2021  







2 The story breaks  



2.1  2021  





2.2  2022  





2.3  2023  







3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














Timeline of Partygate







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Colour photograph of Boris Johnson, Simon Case and unidentified others with their faces blurred at a surprise birthday party for Johnson, at a time when such gatherings were against the law.
The Partygate scandal contributed to the fall of the premiership of Boris Johnson (right).[1][2]

Partygate was a political scandal in the United Kingdom about gatherings of government and Conservative Party staff during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021, at a time when such events were prohibited by public health restrictions. The first COVID-19 death in the UK occurred on 5 March 2020; eighteen days later, the death toll reached 335. As a result, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that the UK would go into a full lockdown, with new restrictions on gathering socially with people from different households. As the pandemic continued, the rules for socialising evolved: on 16 September, the government introduced a new "rule of six", whereby groups of more than six people were banned from meeting, and, the following month, Johnson unveiled new "three-tier" regulations, with London being placed in the medium "tier 1" restrictions. Lockdown rules continued in England until 19 July 2021, at which point almost all of them were lifted.

Despite these new regulations, social gatherings continued to take place in Downing Street and Whitehall "most Fridays",[3] including some that were attended by the Prime Minister himself. In May, both a cheese and wine party and a BYOB event were held in the Downing Street garden. On Johnson's 56th birthday in June, a surprise party was thrown for him in the Cabinet Office, with a second party in his flat later that evening. In December, various Christmas parties were thrown, including one in the Downing Street Press Office on 18 December that involved a Secret Santa and an awards ceremony. Two leaving dos were held on 16 April 2021, the eve of the funeral of Prince Philip.

News articles about these events began to appear in late 2021, with the majority of them published by Pippa Crerar, the political editor of the Daily Mirror, and Paul Brand, UK editor of ITV News. The story was first broken under Crerar's byline on 30 November 2021, with details of three parties.[4] Seven days later, a video showing the Press Secretary Allegra Stratton joking about the Christmas party in the Downing Street Press Office was broadcast by ITV News. Speaking in Parliament the following day, Johnson said that he was sickened and furious to see the clip, but that "the guidance was followed and the rules were followed at all times".[2]

As details of the parties continued to be revealed in news stories throughout 2021 and 2022, investigations into them were announced. In December 2021, an inquiry led by the civil servant Sue Gray was started. Gray's completed report, published in May 2022, criticised the senior leadership at both Downing Street and the Cabinet Office, and said that they must bear responsibility for "failures of leadership and judgment".[5] In January 2021, a criminal investigation into breaches of lockdown rules a Downing Street was launched by the Metropolitan Police. As a result of the operation, 126 fixed penalty notices were issued, including one to Johnson for attending his surprise birthday party, making him the first serving prime minister to be found to have broken the law. In June 2023, an inquiry by the Commons Select Committee of Privileges concluded that Johnson had deliberately misled Parliament when he said that COVID-19 rules had been followed at all times in Downing Street.

Lockdown parties

[edit]

2020

[edit]
Martin Reynolds's official government portrait, taken in April 2015
Martin Reynolds was the Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister from October 2019 until February 2022.[13]
refer to caption
Prime Minister Boris Johnson (left) and Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak (right) at a surprise party for Johnson's birthday on 19 June 2020[19]
refer to caption
Johnson attending a leaving party in Downing Street on 13 November 2020[19]
Head-and-shoulders colour photograph of Tobias Ellwood in July 2014.
Tobias Ellwood was first elected to Westminster as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Bournemouth East in May 2005.[34]
refer to caption
Johnson announcing that London will move into tier 3 restrictions on 16 December 2020[39]
Head-and-shoulders colour photograph of Allegra Stratton in February 2015.
Allegra Stratton was Downing Street Press Secretary from October 2020 to April 2021.[43]

2021

[edit]

The story breaks

[edit]

2021

[edit]
Side profile colour photograph of Nimco Ali speaking from a podium in April 2019.
Reports that Nimco Ali had spent Christmas with the Johnsons in 2020 first appeared in Harper's Magazine.[56]
Jacob Rees-Mogg's official 2017 photograph for Parliament
Footage of Jacob Rees-Mogg joking about the Partygate scandal was published on 7 December 2021.[62]
Sue Gray's official government portrait, taken in April 2021
On 17 December 2021, the civil servant Sue Gray was brought in to investigate allegations of parties in Downing Street during lockdown.[76]

2022

[edit]
Head-and-shoulders colour photograph of Shaun Bailey in April 2019.
Shaun Bailey resigned as chair of the Economy Committee in the London Assembly on 11 January 2022.[81]
On 23 May 2022, ITV News published four photographs of Johnson attending the 13 November 2020 leaving party.[113]
refer to caption
Johnson announcing his resignation as prime minister on 7 July 2022
Colour photograph of members the ITV News team posing onstage with their AIB award.
For their coverage of Partygate, Paul Brand (far right) and ITV News won two awards at the AIBs on 11 November 2022.[122]

2023

[edit]
The Commons Select Committee of Privileges' final report into Johnson, published on 15 June 2023[136]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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