Prime Minister Boris Johnson urged Britain on Wednesday to move on from what he described as a “very, very frustrating episode” when his closest adviser provoked outrage for taking a long-distance drive during the coronavirus lockdown.
Dominic Cummings has refused to quit after it was revealed that he had travelled 425 km from London to northern England in March with his four-year-old son and his wife, who was sick at the time, to be close to relatives.
Johnson has repeatedly backed his adviser. On Wednesday several lawmakers directly challenged the prime minister as he again voiced his support for the aide, who is credited with delivering a big majority for Johnson at a parliamentary election in December.
However, opinion polls show that faith in Johnson has tumbled since the story broke on Friday, and some of his Conservative lawmakers have called for Cummings to go.
“It’s been a very, very frustrating episode and I understand why people ... have been so concerned, because this country is going through a horrendously difficult time,” Johnson told a parliamentary committee.
“(If) what we need to do is to focus on getting the message right ... then I think what we need to do really is to move on.”
It was a message his ministers pressed earlier on Wednesday, trying to dampen down the row over Cummings, a divisive figure who is seen by both allies and opponents as Johnson’s most important and influential strategist.
Former finance minister Sajid Javid added to the dissent within Johnson’s party by saying Cummings should apologize, the Bromsgrove Standard newspaper reported.
Around 40 Conservative lawmakers have gone further and said he should quit, a tally by Sky News showed.
Yvette Cooper, an opposition Labour lawmaker, said the prime minister was more interested in “trying to protect Dominic Cummings” than giving straight answers.
“The problem is, that means you are putting your political concerns ahead of clear public health messages,” she said.
Johnson, who suggested she was trying to score political points, announced that a new test and trace program to better monitor the spread of the virus in the population would launch in England on Thursday.
The program, which will mass test and identify the contacts of anyone who has been close to a case of COVID-19, is seen as crucial to helping the government ease the most stringent lockdown in peacetime history.
Britain is poised to start relaxing measures on non-essential retail shops and schools, and possibly to allow more social contact soon for millions of people who have been mostly stuck at home for weeks.
Cummings said he had acted reasonably and not broken the lockdown rules. But YouGov found 71% of people believed he had broken them, and 59% thought he should resign.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesIt is vital that Boris gets to keep Cummings.
May 28th, 2020 - 11:13 am 0The press packs don't observe social distancing do they, sack them first.
Other MPs have travelled even further why not sack them first.
The underlings and the remainers had a members bill to extend the transition for TWO YEARS and Cummings getting well too soon has stopped it and with Cummings and Boris in their places it doesn't stand a chance of becomming law even though it passed its first reading without a vote!
Cumming broke no laws and the remainer press shouldn't try to tell me what to think.
I gave up the BBC TV and I have no more TV license but I have had to turn off even the BBC radio because I couldn't stand it any more!
No problems in Hong Kong, China, USA, no virus deaths in South America THE ONLY NEWS: I guy drove from London to Tyneside !!
Nobody ever before has driven to Tyneside from London and ti went on and on and on!
Leave Cummings alone and sack the remainer triators who are in touch with Barnier!
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