June 8, 2022
12:03 pm
Prime Ministers Questions
Catch-up
PMQs Live – Northern Ireland protocol, Starmer goes soft on PM
PMQs LIVE – NO big plan, cancer tests, failing NHS
What time is PMQs today? Boris to face grilling after no-confidence vote
PMQs Live – PM address the House over Sue Gray report into partygate
PMQs Live – 25/05 – ‘Downing street is rotten from the top’
PMQs Live – 25/05 – Ian Blackford – PM must resign
PMQs Live – 25/05 – Captain Hindsight – U-turn on windfall tax
PMQs Live – 25/05 – Sue Gray Report released – Partygate photos
What time is PMQs today? Boris to face grilling after no-confidence vote
PM Boris Johnson is to face the Commons today following a hectic week in which he scrapped through a no-confidence vote.
The PM has kept his seat as Tory leader and PM with a 59 per cent majority of votes.
Today’s PMQs is the first time he will face questions since the vote, which has left him and his party wounded.
What time is PMQs today?
PMQs is back on Wednesday 18 May and kicks off at 12 midday.
You can watch all the action via a live stream on this page or follow along with TEXT updates here.
What can you expect from Prime Minister’s Questions?
Labour will likely focus on the falling Tory support following the no-confidence vote.
The PM is expected to receive a “noisy show of support from his backers in the Commons”.
Despite winning the vote, critics say the results wound him.
Sue Gray’s report into lockdown parties in Downing Street may have prompted the vote, but it also exposed a deep unhappiness among MPs throughout the party across a range of issues.
The PM is expected to use the session to help restore his premiership. But he will likely face tough questions.
Boris Johnson confidence vote?
The Prime Minister won the no-confidence vote – triggered when 54 of his MPs demanded the contest.
He received 211 votes of confidence but 148 against him, which has not silenced the questions about his leadership.
However, the Prime Minister needed over 50 per cent of the vote to remain, and so his 59 per cent win means that he has secured his position for now.
Boris Johnson: PM seeks to move on with focus on tax cutting after bruising confidence vote
Theresa May wore a ball gown to vote in Boris Johnson’s confidence vote
PMQs Live – PM address the House over Sue Gray report into partygate
PMQs has ended and PM offers a statement to the house regarding the release of the Sue Gray report into the rule-breaking in govt buildings during the UK’s lockdowns over 2020 and 2021.
…………………
Ian Blackford, the SNP leader at Westminister, says Boris Johnson should take responsiblity for what happened. “The fish rots from the head.”
He refers to this advert, tweeted recently by the Tory MP Steve Baker.
— Steve Baker MP FRSA 🗽 (@SteveBakerHW) May 23, 2022
…………………
PM – ‘sanctimonious’ Labour leader, accusing ‘Sir Beer Korma’ of hypocrisy and saying he should apologise too
Boris Johnson is responding to Keir Starmer.
He says that during Covid Starmer was “sniping from the sidelines and veering from one position to the next”.
In his response today, Starmer failed to show “common sense”, he claims. He says Starmer failed to appreciate the context of what happened. He says the boundaries between work and socialisting became blurred.
He accuses Starmer of being “sanctimonious”, and he descibes him as a “gaseous Zeppelin”, saying his pomposity has been punctured.
He goes on:
Sir Beer Korma is currently failing to hold himself to the same high standards he demanded of me.
Johnson says Starmer said that Johnson should resign when he was being investigated by the police. But Starmer is being investigated by the police, and he has not resigned.
He urges Starmer to apologise. – (Guardian)
…………………
Starmer speaks
Starmer says Sue Gray report is ‘monument to hubris and arrogance’ of Johnson’s government – (Guardian)
Keir Starmer says the door of 10 Downing Street is a national symbol.
The Sue Gray report has revealed what happpened, and how staff were treated. He says it is a “monument to the hubris and the arrogance of a government that believed it was one rule for them, and another rule for everyone else”.
Starmer says what Johnson told MPs about the rules being followed at all times has been shown to be wrong.
Johnson seems to be proud of the fact he was only fined once, he says.
And he accuses Tory MPs of setting the hurdle for the PM’s survival at “lower than a snake’s belly”.
Starmer says he believes in leadership. The public need to know that not all politicians are the same, he says.
And he says it it now time for Tory MPs to show leadership too.
This prime minister is steering the country in the wrong direction.
Tory MPs should stop him driving the country “to disaster”.
The values symbolised by the door at No 10 need to be restored.
You cannot be a law maker and a law breaker.
…………………
He doesn't think he did anything wrong, as he said repeatedly in 2020 'Everyone better remember I'm the fucking Fuhrer around here' #RegimeChange
— Dominic Cummings (@Dominic2306) May 25, 2022
…………………
‘Humbled by experience’ – PM
The PM says: “I do not seek to absolve myself of responsibility” but to “simply explain why I spoke as I did in this House”.
He points to Sue Gray’s report about the progress being made since the interim report – including easier ways for staff to complain about behaviour.
A number of MPs laugh when he says all the senior management has changed within Downing Street.
But he says he is “confident” with the changes, that he is “humbled by the experience and have learned our lesson”.
Johnson adds: “Whatever the failing of No 10 and the Cabinet Office throughout this difficult period and my own, I continue to believe the civil servants and advisers… are good, hard working people motivated… to do the very best for our country.” – (BBC)
…………………
…………………
PM ‘appalled’ by what happened at events when he wasn’t there
Johnson says this is his first chance to set out the context.
Over a period of 600 days, the rules were found to have been broken on eight dates, in a building that is 5,300 ft square.
He says hundreds of people work there. And it has got larger in recent years.
He is trying to set out the context, he says, not to mitigate himself.
The exemptions include circumstances were people were leaving government. It was appropriate to thank people for leaving. He says he thinks this is an important feature of leadership. He was present at some of these; he is trying to explain why he was there.
Some of these gatherings went on late.
He says he had no knowledge of that. He was not there. He was surprised and “appalled” by what he learnt. He is particularly shocked by how security and cleaning staff were treated. (See 11.33am.) He would like to apologise to them, and the thinks his officials should apologise too.
He says his attendance at these events has been found to be acceptable.
But he says that when he said the rules were followed at all time, he was wrong.
He says Sue Gray has said she is pleased that progress has been made in addressing the points she raised her interim report. – (Guardian)
…………………
Appropriate to thank staff who are leaving – PM
The PM says he is trying to set out the context, not to mitigate or excuse what happened.
He says it was “appropriate” to thank staff who were leaving for the work they had done.
And he admits to “briefly attending the gatherings” to praise them, which is a key part of “leadership”.
But Johnson says the gatherings carried on afterwards and that was a breach of the rules.
“I had no knowledge of those subsequent proceedings as I simply wasn’t there,” he says.
The PM also says he was “shocked” and “appalled”, especially over the treatment of security and cleaning staff.
When he said the rules and guidance had been followed to MPs, he “believed” it, he says
…………………
People were working extremely long hours – PM
The PM says over 600 days of the pandemic, gatherings over eight dates were found to have breached rules.
“These people were working extremely long hours doing their best” to help with the pandemic, Johnson adds, referring to officials and political staff in No 10.
…………………
Boris Johnson at #PMQs says "Labour campaigned to put up taxes on businesses to higher than they've ever been in this country"
In 2019, Labour campaigned to put corporation tax to 26%. After 18 years of Conservative govt, corporation tax was 33% in 1997
Sunak has put it to 25%
— Andrew Fisher (@FisherAndrew79) May 25, 2022
…………………
I take full responsibility – PM
Johnson says he is grateful to Sue Gray for the work she has done, and thanks her and the Metropolitan Police.
He says he want to begin by renewing his apology to the house “for the short lunchtime” gathering he attended and was fined for.
He says “above all he takes full responsibility” for everything that happened,.