Now thereâs leaked video, not of the alleged party itself, but of a mock news conference staged by Boris Johnsonâs former press secretary, about the party, four days after the alleged festivities.
The Christmas party scandal has been bubbling on the back burner for a week â and now it could explode. The story plays into assertions that Johnson and his government cannot be trusted, that it is one rule for the people and another rule for the rulers.
Brits really donât like that. And they cherish their very merry holiday parties â and to learn that 10 Downing Street might have been whooping it up as the rest of the country was told to hunker down, really grates.
The revelations come just as Johnson is reportedly set to announce new restrictions to curb the spread of the omicron variant.
The opposition is naturally calling Johnson out. David Lammy, the Labour Partyâs point person on foreign affairs, said it was âone rule for them and another for the rest of us.â He appeared on the BBC on Wednesday morning, unlike Sajid Javid, the health secretary, who had canceled his appearance after the footage was leaked.
The British government usually puts forward a minister to do a round of interviews in the morning. Before canceling, Javid would have been expected to mark the anniversary of Britain becoming the first country in the West to administer vaccines outside of clinical trials. He would also have been expected to urge people to get a booster shot â or jab â amid concerns about the new variant.
The Christmas party affair has attracted the attention of Londonâs Metropolitan Police, which is now reviewing the footage in relation to âalleged breachesâ of covid-19 regulations at the time.
The leaked video clip, obtained by ITV news, shows a mock news conference staged by Johnsonâs former top spokeswoman, who was answering questions lobbed at her by fellow staffers, in a practice round as they prepared for the real deal.
The clip is not definitive proof, but it is damning â as it appears to suggest that staffers knew all about the party and were cracking jokes about it.
Asked if there was such a fete, then-press secretary Allegra Stratton, replies, âthis fictional party was a business meeting and it was not socially distanced.â
Pressed for an answer in the rehearsal by Johnsonâs top aide, who was playing the role of a journalist, Stratton says, âI went home.â Everyone is laughing.
Asked if the prime minister would condone such a party, Strattons asks the room, âWhatâs the answer?â
Finally, another aides jokes that âit wasnât a party, it was cheese and wineâ and Stratton laughs and asks âis cheese and wine all right?â
On Dec. 18, 2020, a Friday, the day many British media outlets have been claiming the party took place, parties in London were banned. The official guidance stated, âyou must not have a work Christmas lunch or party where that is a primarily social activity.â
The following day, Johnson announced a tightening of rules, effectively canceling Christmas for millions.
The images from the mock news conference were plastered across the British papers on Wednesday.
âA Sick Jokeâ ran a front-page headline on the Daily Mail; the Metro newspaper scolded the âNo. 10 Party Clowns,â referring to the prime ministerâs office, located at 10 Downing Street.
Those who lost loved ones in the pandemic said that it was deeply upsetting.
âItâs disgusting,â Rivka Gottlieb, who lost her father in the first lockdown, told the BBC. âIt shows the utter contempt they hold the British public in,â she said.
During the first lockdown in 2020, Dominic Cummings, Johnsonâs then top aide, often called âBorisâs brain,â flouted strict rules and damaged public trust in the governmentâs handling of the pandemic. He drove six hours north, to shelter at his family farm, after he and his wife were infected by the virus. Later he drove to a nearby castle, known for sightseeing, in order, he claimed to test his eye sight.