UK's Johnson faces formal investigation over funding of apartment
renovation
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[April 28, 2021]
By Guy Faulconbridge and Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's Electoral
Commission opened a formal investigation into the financing of the
refurbishment of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Downing Street
apartment, saying there were grounds to suspect an offence may have been
committed.
Eight days before local elections across England, as well as the
election of the Welsh and Scottish regional assemblies, Johnson is
facing a stream of allegations about everything from his muddled initial
handling of the COVID-19 crisis to questions about who leaked what from
his office.
"We are now satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that
an offence or offences may have occurred," the Electoral Commission said
of the financing of the apartment above Number 11 Downing Street where
Johnson resides.
"We will therefore continue this work as a formal investigation to
establish whether this is the case," the commission said.
The investigation will determine whether any transactions relating to
the works fall within the regime regulated by the commission and whether
such funding was reported as required.
If it finds that an offence has occurred - and that there is sufficient
evidence - then the commission can issue a fine or refer the matter to
the police.
Asked last month about the refurbishment, Johnson's spokeswoman said all
donations, gifts and benefits were properly declared, and that no
Conservative Party funds were being used to pay for the refurbishment.
Though Johnson has over the years repeatedly weathered gaffes, crises
over Brexit and disclosures about his adultery, he is now grappling with
an array of accusations which opponents say show he is unfit for office.
The opposition says the allegations show Johnson's government is riddled
by sleaze and cronyism, including lobbying by former Prime Minister
David Cameron on behalf of the finance company Greensill Capital.
His supporters deny he has done anything wrong and say he is focused on
the COVID-19 crisis.
DOWNING STREET APARTMENT
Johnson has a taxpayer-funded 30,000 pound ($42,000) allowance each year
for maintaining and furnishing his official residence, but anything
above that must be met by the prime minister.
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A general view shows number 10, 11 and 12 Downing Street in London,
Britain, April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Ministers have said Johnson has paid for the work
himself, but it is unclear when he paid, and whether the
refurbishment, reported to have cost 200,000 pounds ($280,000) was
initially financed by a loan of some kind. Under political financing
rules, Johnson would have been required to declare this.
Critics say that if the funds had come originally from a
Conservative Party supporter, this would raise the question of
influence-peddling. The opposition Labour Party has demanded an
explanation.
Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner wrote to Simon Case, the head of
the civil service, asking him to investigate answers about the
affair given by Johnson's then-press secretary earlier this year.
Allegra Stratton, a former BBC journalist, was Johnson’s press
secretary from October until last week.
Dominic Cummings, who was Johnson's key adviser on the Brexit
campaign and helped him to win an election in 2019 before an
acrimonious split last year, said on Friday that Johnson had wanted
donors to pay for the renovation secretly.
Cummings said he had told the prime minister such plans were
"unethical, foolish, possibly illegal".
Asked if Johnson had received a loan from the Conservative Party for
the refurbishment, transport minister Grant Shapps told Sky News:
"The prime minister has already paid for it."
In a further potentially damaging allegation, the Daily Mail
newspaper on Sunday cited unidentified sources as saying that, in
October, shortly after agreeing to a second lockdown, Johnson had
told a meeting in Downing Street: "No more fucking lockdowns - let
the bodies pile high in their thousands."
Asked on Monday whether he had made the remark, Johnson told
broadcasters: "No, but again, I think the important thing, I think,
that people want us to get on and do as a government is to make sure
that the lockdowns work, and they have."
($1 = 0.7209 pounds)
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Michael Holden; Editing by Kevin
Liffey, Nick Tattersall and Angus MacSwan)
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