Gove apologises after Covid report alleges 'toxic' culture

- Published
Former cabinet minister Lord Michael Gove has apologised on behalf of the then-government and Conservative Party for "mistakes made" during the coronavirus pandemic.
In her long-awaited report published on Thursday,, external Baroness Hallett said Boris Johnson, the prime minister at the time, oversaw a "toxic and chaotic" culture in No 10 during Covid.
Lord Gove told the BBC's Today programme some "attitudes" in Downing Street had been "far from ideal" but added that in a crisis "the business of government can't be carried out in the manner of a Jane Austen novel".
He also said an earlier lockdown would have been "wiser" but questioned the report's assertion that it would have meant fewer deaths.
Responding to the report, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the government would learn lessons from the report and was already "taking measures to make sure that, not just the NHS but the government as a whole, is prepared for any number of eventualities".
The 800-page inquiry report said implementing a Covid lockdown a week earlier could have saved 23,000 lives in the first wave in England - although it does not suggest that the overall death toll would have been reduced.
It said lockdown could have been avoided if the government had introduced restrictions such as social distancing and isolating people with symptoms earlier.
The report described February 2020 as a "lost month" and said the government's lack of urgency was "inexcusable".
Johnson, who was prime minister between 2019 and 2022, has been contacted for a comment.
Lord Gove rejected a suggestion that the conclusions of the Covid report would put an end to any future political ambitions Johnson may have.
He said Johnson's style of decision-making "may not be to everyone's taste" but added he was "wrestling with an enormously difficult question about the curtailment of liberty and the maintenance of access to healthcare".
"More than that without his drive we would not have had his vaccine roll-out that ensured we were the first country to put jabs in arms."
Dominic Cummings, a senior aide in Downing Street at the time, is singled out for criticism in the report which suggests he contributed to a "culture of fear" that "poisoned the atmosphere".
Cummings, who left No 10 at the end of 2020, accused the inquiry of enabling "a vast rewriting of history".
He said it was "important for the public to realise that on most of the big questions, the 'experts' including the senior scientists were completely wrong" in the early months of 2020.
Lord Gove said Cummings had been responsible for ensuring data was "accurately and thoroughly interrogated".
He also said the report noted Cummings' interventions had been "critical to putting in place the measures necessary to suppress the virus".
Asked about the culture in Downing Street, he said: "It's the case that we were dealing with, as everyone in the world was, an unprecedented crisis... and of course, under pressure with imperfect information, mistakes are made, voices are raised."
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