Boris Johnson faces MPs amid questions over Downing Street flat revamp
- Published
Boris Johnson will face MPs in the Commons as he battles accusations from Labour that he lied over who paid for renovations to his Downing Street flat.
The PM will appear at Prime Minister's Questions for the first time since his ex-adviser accused him of planning for donors to "secretly pay" for the work.
A No 10 spokesman has refused to say whether Mr Johnson initially received a loan to cover the costs.
Labour have demanded a detailed explanation from the prime minister.
While it is not against the rules to receive donations, politicians must declare them so the public can see who has given them money and whether it has had any influence on their decisions.
Mr Johnson has told reporters, external any relevant donations would be declared "in due course".
And his spokesman said the costs "have been met by the prime minister personally".
But No 10 has not yet made clear exactly how the works were paid for in the first place and declined to say whether the prime minister received a loan from the Conservative Party.
Mr Johnson is also likely to be asked at Prime Minister's Questions about accusations he said he would rather see "bodies pile high" than approve a third lockdown.
The Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said the prime minister "should resign" if he did make such a comment.
Sir Ed described the reported remark, that the PM denies ever making, as "some of the most callous comments" a prime minister has ever made and said that Mr Johnson "needs to be held to account for his actions and his words".
The comment was first reported in the Daily Mail, external - but later, the BBC and ITV separately reported sources confirming Mr Johnson did make the remarks.
However, No 10 strongly denied he said the phrase, and the PM described the reports as "total rubbish".
A Downing Street spokesman did not deny that Mr Johnson said he would rather let coronavirus "rip" than impose tighter restrictions.
Questions over the prime minister's flat were triggered when his former aide Dominic Cummings detailed his own take on Mr Johnson's plans in a blog published on his website., external
Like many previous prime ministers, Mr Johnson chose to live in the flat above No 11 Downing Street rather than the smaller apartment in No 10.
Prime ministers are given £30,000 to spend on renovating their new home. However, it has been reported that Mr Johnson's changes cost up to £200,000.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Tuesday, Labour's shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said any loans or donations to cover the costs "should have been declared by now".
"We really need to know who's given the loan, who's given the money, because we need to know who the prime minister...is beholden to," he said.
"To be honest he lied yesterday - that's not good enough."
Asked about possible donations, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said: "There will be a Cabinet Office report when they put out their annual accounts and everyone will be able to see exactly what happened."
Mr Johnson's spokesman has said the prime minister had "acted in accordance with the appropriate codes of conduct and electoral law".
On Monday, Cabinet Secretary Mr Case - the UK's most senior civil servant - told MPs the prime minister had asked him to review how the refurbishment of the No 11 flat was funded.
Sir Ed has written to Mr Case asking him to reveal the details "as a matter of urgency".
Speaking on Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Shapps, defended donors being asked to help fund projects, saying "a lot of people want to ensure the country is able to keep its buildings and national monuments in good shape".
He said that because Downing Street is a place of work and the prime minister's living accommodation, Mr Johnson found himself in the situation of "living above the shop".
He added that he believed it was a good idea to "look at whether there ought to be some sort of national set-up, a foundation or something else to look after that in the interests of future generations".
Also on Today, the columnist Sarah Vine, who is married to the Cabinet Office Minister, Michael Gove, backed the idea of a trust to fund refurbishment work.
She said the prime minister "can't be expected to live in a skip" and if he wants "a pink sofa instead of a green sofa that's a perfectly reasonable thing for him to want".
- Published27 April 2021
- Published26 April 2021