Connect with us

Published

on

Boris Johnson’s legal defence fees for the probe into his role in the partygate scandal have topped £265,000, new figures have revealed.

The Cabinet Office said on Thursday the former prime minister’s legal defence totalled £265,522 – a bill it paid as Mr Johnson defended himself to the parliamentary committee.

Peters & Peters, the law firm used to provide Mr Johnson with legal advice, was handed a contract in August 2022 worth £129,000, although the Cabinet Office later estimated costs would rise to £222,000.

Follow the Politics Hub as polls close in three by-elections

The inquiry itself found Mr Johnson had lied to parliament over his role in the lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street.

Boris Johnson, who stood down as prime minister in September 2022, also quit as an MP earlier this year ahead of the full report, triggering a by-election in Uxbridge and South Ruislip.

The Privileges Committee report recommended Mr Johnson face a 90-day suspension from the House of Commons for misleading MPs and for being complicit in a campaign to discredit the panel.

More on Boris Johnson

MPs approved the report last month.

The legal costs were first reported by The Guardian.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

MPs backed partygate report

Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Angela Rayner said: “At the height of a cost of living crisis, Rishi Sunak has stood by and watched as the disgraced former prime minister milks the taxpayer to the tune of a quarter of a million pounds to prop up his partygate denials.

“This is a spineless prime minister, too weak to put a stop to this unprecedented and unacceptable waste of taxpayers’ money or force his predecessor to hand back taxpayers’ money.”

Ahead of the COVID-19 inquiry, Mr Johnson was due to handover his WhatsApp messages from his old phone, but missed the deadline due to allegedly forgetting his password to the device.

Continue Reading

Politics

Crypto maturity demands systematic discipline over speculation

Published

on

By

Crypto maturity demands systematic discipline over speculation

Crypto maturity demands systematic discipline over speculation

Unlimited leverage and sentiment-driven valuations create cascading liquidations that wipe billions overnight. Crypto’s maturity demands systematic discipline.

Continue Reading

Politics

NYC mayor establishes digital assets and blockchain office

Published

on

By

NYC mayor establishes digital assets and blockchain office

NYC mayor establishes digital assets and blockchain office

The executive order creating the Office of Digital Assets and Blockchain Technology under the New York City government came three months before Eric Adams will leave office.

Continue Reading

Politics

US gov’t seeks to add $14B to crypto reserves as part of forfeiture case

Published

on

By

US gov’t seeks to add B to crypto reserves as part of forfeiture case

US gov’t seeks to add B to crypto reserves as part of forfeiture case

The US government said it would pursue forfeiture of the Bitcoin holdings tied to a Cambodia-based company if the alleged ringleader were convicted.

Continue Reading

Trending