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Boris Johnson leaving 10 Downing Street earlier this week. Tayfun Salci

No 10 apologises to Buckingham Palace for parties on eve of Prince Philip’s funeral

Reports suggest senior official Sue Gray could censure PM following inquiry.

LAST UPDATE | 14 Jan 2022

DOWNING STREET HAS apologised to Buckingham Palace after it emerged parties were held in Number 10 the day before the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral last year.

Two gatherings reportedly took place at Downing Street, with the British Prime Minister’s former director of communications James Slack apologising for the “anger and hurt” one of the events – a leaving do held for him – had caused.

A spokesman for Boris Johnson confirmed No 10 has said sorry to the Palace.

The spokesman said: “It is deeply regrettable that this took place at a time of national mourning and No 10 has apologised to the Palace.

“You heard from the PM this week, he’s recognised No 10 should be held to the highest standards, and take responsibility for things we did not get right.”

The day after the events on 16 April 2021, the Queen of England attended her husband Philip’s funeral wearing a face mask and socially distanced from her family at Windsor Castle, in line with Covid restrictions.

The British Prime Minister’s spokesman said Boris Johnson was at his country residence Chequers on 16 April and had not been invited to the events.

Asked why No 10 had apologised rather than Johnson himself, his spokesman said: “Well, again, the Prime Minister said earlier misjudgments have been made and it’s right people apologise, as the PM did earlier this week.

“It remains the case that I can’t prejudge the inquiry, which you know is ongoing, which has been led by Sue Gray, but we acknowledge the significant public anger, it was regrettable this took place a time of national mourning.”

It is understood the apology had been delivered via a telephone call through official channels.

It comes after Slack, who until last year was Johnson’s director of communications, apologised this morning for the “anger and hurt” his leaving party had caused.

Slack, who is now deputy editor-in-chief of The Sun newspaper, said he took “full responsibility” and was “deeply sorry”.

In an emailed statement issued by The Sun’s publisher, News UK, he added: “This event should not have happened at the time that it did.”

His party was one of two reported to have taken place that evening, which started separately and later merged.

The Daily Telegraph reported accounts from witnesses, who said alcohol was drunk and guests danced to music, with a person sent to a local shop with a suitcase to buy wine.

A Downing Street spokesperson said of Slack’s event: “On this individual’s last day he gave a farewell speech to thank each team for the work they had done to support him, both those who had to be in the office for work and on a screen for those working from home.”

embedded256589437 James Slack Stefan Rousseau Stefan Rousseau

Conservative backlash

Conservative MP Roger Gale said the gatherings were “wholly unacceptable” and confirmed he had submitted a letter of no confidence in Johnson to the 1922 Committee of backbench MPs.

Yesterday evening his Tory colleague Andrew Bridgen became the fifth MP to have publicly said they had written to committee chairman Graham Brady.

The Telegraph reported that as many as 30 letters have been submitted so far, with a total of 54 needed to trigger a vote.

However, UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said people should “move on” following Johnson’s apology over a previous bash on Wednesday.

Senior Conservative MP Julian Knight told Times Radio: “What I would say is that it will be charitable to say that partygate, if you like, is due to acts of extreme stupidity on behalf of those at No 10.”

Asked if that meant he thought the Prime Minister had been stupid, he said it applied to “anyone involved”.

Meanwhile, a councillor from the Sutton Coldfield Conservatives, an association in a safe Tory seat which withdrew its support for Johnson yesterday, said the move reflected “local views at the very grassroots levels”.

Councillor Simon Ward told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “The conversation we had last night … was really about what I think we have the right to expect from our leaders and the standards of leadership we expect from them, and the trust that we put in them.”

At the time of the two newly-reported gatherings on April 16, Government guidance said: “You must not socialise indoors except with your household or support bubble. You can meet outdoors, including in gardens, in groups of six people or two households.”

It brings the total number of parties or gatherings alleged to have happened across Whitehall during restrictions to 14.

On Wednesday, the British Prime Minister apologised for attending a “bring your own booze” party in the Downing Street garden in May 2020, during the first coronavirus lockdown, but insisted he believed it was a work event and could “technically” have been within the rules.

Members of the UK Government urged Johnson’s critics to wait for the findings of senior official Sue Gray’s inquiry before passing judgment after Tory MPs began publicly calling for him to quit.

The Times reported that the inquiry was expected to find no evidence of criminality but that the investigation could censure Johnson for a lack of judgment.

The newspaper said Gray was expected to avoid concluding whether Johnson breached the ministerial code, as this would fall outside her remit.

But she is set criticise the culture in Downing Street, it said.

The Metropolitan Police said there is no change to its position on investigating Downing Street parties amid fresh allegations of more gatherings taking place.

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    Mute Abdul Abhaile
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    Jun 24th 2023, 2:19 PM

    Cue the Stoners defending drug use and wanting it legalised.

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jun 24th 2023, 4:30 PM

    @Abdul Abhaile: Can you give one good reason why it should remain illegal?

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    Mute Abdul Abhaile
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    Jun 24th 2023, 5:25 PM

    @Tomaldo: Did you even bother reading the article and you want a reason why it should remain illegal?
    Jeez, Stoner’s brains really are wired differently.

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jun 24th 2023, 6:34 PM

    @Abdul Abhaile: I read it twice. Jim Walsh (Dept of Health) said we should treat it a as health issue, not justice, the guy from Portugal said we’ll never have a drugs free society and there never has been. 6 out of 10 deaths were caused by benzodiazepenes (legal), twice as many as cocaine, 3 out 10 Methadone (legal) and more from prescription drugs. There are no plans to ban any of them and rightly so. Can I have some of what you’re smoking.

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jun 24th 2023, 6:56 PM

    @Abdul Abhaile: btw you didn’t answer my question, you mentioned the article which backs up my opinion that they should be legal.

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    Mute barry lyons
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    Jun 25th 2023, 10:24 AM

    @Abdul Abhaile: the only thing stoner, is your Stone Age attitude . Why not suggest burnings at the stake or tarring and feathering .
    Alcohol poses more danger .. oh wait, but they are well looked after by lobbyists

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    Mute Aine O Connor
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    Jun 24th 2023, 4:48 PM

    Why are so many resorting to drug taking, are their lives so miserable that they are trying to escape reality some of the time. Past generations suffered wars, sickness, hunger , poverty lack of opportunity , forced emigration and they coped , what’s wrong with people. Why do they think it’s ok to make criminals rich by buying the stuff.

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    Mute michael walsh
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    Jun 24th 2023, 5:42 PM

    @Aine O Connor: they didn’t cope, they used alcohol, drugs , food , sex and lots of other things to take away the pain . Drug use isn’t some new thing, drug use has been around as long as humans have been around

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    Mute michael walsh
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    Jun 24th 2023, 5:42 PM

    @Aine O Connor: they didn’t cope, they used alcohol, drugs , food , sex and lots of other things to take away the pain . Drug use isn’t some new thing, drug use has been around as long as humans have been around Cee

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    Mute Tomaldo
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    Jun 24th 2023, 6:39 PM

    @Aine O Connor: Enjoyment is the reason. I don’t think it’s ok to make criminals rich, that’s why I’d love to see legalisation tried.

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    Mute A D
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    Jun 24th 2023, 11:24 PM

    @Aine O Connor: Many of the addicts you walk past in the city every day are child abuse victims. Children of generations of abuse victim unfit parents, etc. It’s a part of our cultural heritage.

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Jun 25th 2023, 10:18 AM

    @Aine O Connor: This is a reflection of the vast minority, the majority of recreational users move on with their lives.

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    Mute Paddy Keane
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    Jun 24th 2023, 3:12 PM

    While speaking, an individual proposed that only those with expertise in the field should have a say, and the issue should not be politicized. However, I respectfully disagree, as it is a crucial political matter.

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    Mute Peter
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    Jun 24th 2023, 3:14 PM

    Must be FG FF and The Greens fault that people use cocaine and heroin

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    Mute barry lyons
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    Jun 25th 2023, 10:27 AM

    @Peter: well their policies have directly lead to deprivation, criminality increasing and all the things that make up the ingredients of drug misuse.. so yes FFG are directly responsible. Martin and Varadkar do not give two hoots about us Irish

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    Mute john mac
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    Jun 25th 2023, 12:39 AM

    The reason why cannabis was made illegal was by fake news by the rich newspaper magnets in America long ago who owned forests so they could print their papers and didn’t want the hemp plant to be used

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Jun 25th 2023, 10:15 AM

    No one has ever died from a cannabis over dose, yet because it remains illegal in this country it gets first mention in terms of toxins found. The language around this is almost embarrassingly bias, especially when “excluding those attributable to alcohol alone”… completely ridiculous, propaganda almost.

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    Mute gregory pym
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    Jun 25th 2023, 11:56 AM

    Funny how alcohol is left out of the debate, the biggest killer of them all. Your a criminal for smoking a joint at home but its OK to drink 10 pints and fall around the streets abusing people. Hardly an independent forum either with the make up of the panel. People take drugs including the biggest of them all booze because they enjoy them. We should be concentrating on making them safe, ensuring kids don’t get their hand on them (although we failed on the alcohol front) and having controlled sale via head shops where the state will get tax from the sale of same and at the same time take the market away from the mafia.

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    Mute Pato
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    Jun 25th 2023, 12:00 AM

    The report clearly refers to the cause of such deaths as poisonings, converting them to overdoses is wrong and inaccurate. If someone injests Paraguay,for example, intentionally or accidentally it is not an overdose.

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    Mute gregory pym
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    Jun 25th 2023, 11:58 AM

    @Pato: agree, they are just inflating the figures to justify their forgone conclusion.

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    Mute john christopher
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    Jun 25th 2023, 6:46 AM

    Judge’s are putting dealers back on the street with lenient sentences. Time to cut the head off the snake.

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