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		UK's Johnson to apologise to parliament over lockdown fine
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		 [April 19, 2022] LONDON 
		(Reuters) - British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will apologise to 
		parliament on Tuesday as he faces lawmakers for the first time since he 
		was fined by police for breaking his own COVID-19 lockdown rules, a 
		government official said. 
 Johnson, who will address parliament at around 1430 GMT, was fined last 
		week by the police for attending a birthday party thrown in his honour 
		in June 2020 when people from different households were not allowed to 
		meet indoors.
 
 Opposition parties have called for Johnson to resign, accusing him of 
		misleading parliament after he told lawmakers last year that all rules 
		were followed in Downing Street - the prime minister's official 
		residence and workplace - during the pandemic.
 
 "When he spoke to parliament he was speaking what he believed to be the 
		truth," Britain's Northern Ireland minister Brandon Lewis told Sky News.
 
 "He did not believe at that point that anything he had done was against 
		the rules but he absolutely accepts the police have looked at this, they 
		have taken a different view."
 
 Following the fine last week Johnson said it hadn't occurred to him he 
		was in breach of the rules but he now "humbly" accepted he was.
 
		 
		A poll by J L Partners for The Times newspaper, which asked almost 2,000 
		people to give their view of the prime minister in a few words, found 
		comments from 72% of respondents were negative, compared to 16% that 
		were positive. The most common word used was "liar", it reported. 
		Opposition parties are in talks about how best to seek to censure 
		Johnson, either by pushing for a vote on whether he is in contempt of 
		parliament, or to refer him to a parliamentary committee to investigate 
		whether he deliberately misled lawmakers.
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			British Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivers a speech on 
			immigration, at Lydd Airport, Britain April 14, 2022. Matt 
			Dunham/Pool via REUTERS/ 
            
			 "It is simply incredible for the 
			Prime Minister to say that he just didn't know," senior opposition 
			Labour Party lawmaker Emily Thornberry told Sky News. "He should 
			tell us that he has lied, that he misled parliament and he should 
			resign."
 Pressure from Johnson's own Conservative lawmakers for him to resign 
			has abated with the war in Ukraine in which he has sought to play a 
			leading role in the West's response.
 
 While a handful of have repeated calls for him to go, most say now 
			is not the time.
 
 Conservative lawmaker Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, treasurer of the 
			party's "1922 Committee" which represents lawmakers who have no 
			government jobs, said he would reserve judgement until the police 
			investigation had concluded and the British public had had their say 
			in local elections in early May.
 
 "At the moment my judgement would be, it is certainly not in the 
			country's interests to think about replacing the prime minister," he 
			told BBC Radio.
 
 (Reporting by Kylie MacLellan, James Davey and Andrew MacAskill; 
			Editing by Susan Fenton)
 
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