Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was supposed to face a 90-day suspension for misleading the Parliament if he had still continued as an MP, a report by Commons Privileges Committee on the Partygate scandal said.
Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson deliberately misled Parliament when he denied knowledge of Covid-19 law-breaching parties in Downing Street, the report said.
The Commons Privileges Committee released its final report into the Partygate scandal days after Johnson, 58, resigned from Parliament as an MP, accusing the members of the committee of a "witch hunt" against him. The committee recommended that Johnson must not be entitled to a former member's pass.
Finding him in breach of the Commons rules, the committee was also highly critical of his attacks on its integrity and recommended a suspension of 90 days from Parliament had he not resigned.
“We have concluded above that in deliberately misleading the House Mr Johnson committed a serious contempt. The contempt was all the more serious because it was committed by the Prime Minister, the most senior member of the government,” the Privileges Committee report concludes.
"Although Mr Johnson's resignation as an MP renders it impossible for a sanction of suspension to be imposed, we draw attention to the fact that before the events of Friday, June 9, we had provisionally agreed to recommend a suspension long enough to engage the provisions of the Recall of MPs Act," it says, with reference to Johnson's resignation.
The seven-member committee conducted a year-long investigation into the Partygate allegations.
The committee notes that there is no precedent for a British Prime Minister having been found to have deliberately misled the House of Commons and also that Johnson misled it on an issue of the greatest importance to the House and to the public, and did so repeatedly.
They accuse Johnson of committing further contempt in his attacks on the due parliamentary process with deprecated terms such as witch hunt and kangaroo court.
“We put on record that if he had not resigned his seat, we would have recommended that he be suspended from the service of the House for 90 days for repeated contempts and for seeking to undermine the parliamentary process, by deliberately misleading the House; deliberately misleading the Committee; breaching confidence; impugning the Committee and thereby undermining the democratic process of the House; being complicit in the campaign of abuse and attempted intimidation of the Committee," the report concludes.
Johnson issued another strongly-worded statement in response, saying it was a dreadful day for democracy.
“This is a dreadful day for MPs and for democracy. This decision means that no MP is free from vendetta, or expulsion on trumped-up charges by a tiny minority who want to see him or her gone from the Commons. I do not have the slightest contempt for Parliament, or for the important work that should be done by the Privileges Committee,” he said.
The former prime minister, whose exit from 10 Downing Street last year had been hastened by the Partygate scandal, repeatedly denied Covid-19 lockdown rules were broken within government quarters when asked in the Commons.
In March, the House of Commons Privileges Committee published a summary of its findings and called in Johnson to give oral evidence before decisively concluding whether he knowingly misled Parliament and submitting its complete findings to Parliament.
Last week, Johnson resigned as Conservative Party MP after receiving the draft findings of the final report, a move which will trigger a by-election in his London constituency of Uxbridge and South Ruislip.
The Liberal Democrats demanded that the former PM must be stripped of annual allowance of £115,000. The Guardian quoted Daisy Cooper, the Lib Dem deputy leader as saying, “It is completely unprecedented for a former prime minister to be found to have been a law-breaker and serial liar, who treated the public and parliament with total disdain. Rishi Sunak must cut off Johnson’s ex-prime minister allowance to stop him milking the public purse for his own personal gain.” She added that anything less would be an insult to bereaved families who suffered while the former PM partied.
However, the British PM's office has reportedly rejected such demands. The Guardian quoted PM's spokesperson as saying, “There were no plans either to force Johnson to repay the money spent by the government on his legal advice during the privileges inquiry or to remove his allowance as an ex-PM. These arrangements are fairly longstanding – it’s not a personal salary or allowance, it’s the reimbursement of expenses for office and secretarial costs.”
(With PTI inputs.)