This is the question that's making life difficult in Downing Street, as well as in wherever Johnson himself is currently hanging out (he spent the weekend at a summer fete in Henley where he continues to deny he intends to stand for election next year, a lie so ridiculous it’s barely even a lie, at least not on his scale). But it’s not, one has to think, making life very difficult for Baroness Hallett.
She has requested the prime minister and indeed other cabinet members’ WhatsApp messages be submitted to her inquiry in their entirety. But Johnson, and indeed others, do not want to comply. Large numbers of said messages have been ruled, by the Cabinet Office, which ultimately reports to the prime minister, to be “unambiguously irrelevant” and thus will not be submitted and be made public.
The chair takes a different view that it is up to the independent inquiry, not the politicians, to decide what is and isn’t irrelevant.
Again, you don’t necessarily need the Baroness’s razor-sharp criminal mind to pinpoint precisely what’s going on here. You don’t need half a century steeped in criminal law to see that it is somewhat suboptimal if the people who, let’s face it, are going to be found utterly bang to rights, get to decide for themselves what evidence is and isn’t submitted.
Naturally, they all think it’s terribly unfair. Who would ever be a politician ever again if all of your private messages are just going to be sent to a public inquiry and then published, presumably to great embarrassment?
This story is from the May 31, 2023 edition of The Independent.
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This story is from the May 31, 2023 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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