Boris Johnson to impose workplace alcohol ban in Downing Street after Partygate fallout

Boris Johnson has been quizzed by civil servant over the Partygate scandals it was revealed on Sunday night, as it emerged he plans to impose a booze ban in No 10 as part of his ‘Operation Red Meat’ fightback aimed at saving his premiership. 

Mr Johnson is understood to have discussed the illicit parties that were held within Downing Street with the Cabinet Office’s Sue Gray, who is leading the inquiry ahead of its publishing which could come as early as this week.

No 10 is braced for a difficult week with fears Tory MPs will return to Westminster today having spent the weekend been barracked by their constituents over the row.  

But Whitehall appears to already be bracing for Ms Gray’s findings, with the Prime Minister launching a pre-emptive ‘policy blitz’ in an attempt to push back against the biggest crisis he has endured since taking office in 2019.

An end to Downing Street’s drinking culture has been mooted as a large part of a wider policy shake-up dubbed Operation Red Meat in the wake of the party scandal.

The long-called for end of the BBC licence and revamped efforts to curb migrant crossings in the Channel were also among the other ‘populist moves’ touted by Downing Street as part of renewed efforts to woo voters and rebel Tory MPs.

Tense negotiations between the Government and the BBC over the cost of the annual fee until the end of 2027 have concluded, with Ms Dorries deciding to hold the licence at £159 for the next two years. 

And for the first time in history, the UK Border Force will be placed under a military chain of command in the fight against illegal people traffickers following a record-breaking year for crossings in the English Channel.

Sue Gray

Boris Johnson has been quizzed by senior civil servant Sue Gray (right) over the Partygate allegations that have rocked the Tory party in recent weeks

Mr Johnson is believed to be preparing a cull of his inner circle. Martin Reynolds, his principal private secretary (pictured above) who sent an email inviting staff to ‘bring your own booze’ in the No 10 garden during the first lockdown, and chief-of-staff Dan Rosenfield, are among those seen at risk.

Mr Johnson is believed to be preparing a cull of his inner circle. Martin Reynolds, his principal private secretary (pictured above) who sent an email inviting staff to ‘bring your own booze’ in the No 10 garden during the first lockdown, and chief-of-staff Dan Rosenfield, are among those seen at risk.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson remains under major pressure over the Number 10 party row as he plots to stabilise his premiership

Prime Minister Boris Johnson remains under major pressure over the Number 10 party row as he plots to stabilise his premiership

Labour now has a 10 point lead over the Tories - its biggest advantage over the Conservatives since 2013

Labour now has a 10 point lead over the Tories – its biggest advantage over the Conservatives since 2013 

Operation Red Meat: Taking back control 

‘Operation Red Meat’ is expected to include:

  • A No 10 workplace ‘booze ban’ to end the drinking culture that led to party row. Boris Johnson is drafting rules for Downing Street staff that will limit alcohol to being served only at official functions. 
  • Clearout of No 10 staff caught up in party row. Martin Reynolds, Mr Johnson’s principal private secretary who emailed the ‘bring your own booze’ invite for the Downing Street garden party in the first lockdown, and chief of staff Dan Rosenfield, are among those seen at risk.
  • Two-year BBC licence fee freeze to help ease household bills. Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries is expected to confirm that the cost of an annual licence will remain at £159 until 2024.
  • Drive to bring down NHS waiting lists. The number of people on a hospital waiting list in England hit six million for the first time, figures showed last week. In December, nearly 27 per cent of patients at A&E waited more than four hours to be seen – a record high. 
  • Extra money for jobs and skills training to help those out of work and further reduce the number of jobseekers. The unemployment rate fell to 4.2 per cent in the three months to the end of October, down from 4.3 per cent in the three months to the end of September.
  • Get rid of Plan B Covid restrictions, such as the wearing of masks in shops and on public transport and vaccine passports for large events on January 26. 
  • Publication of the Levelling Up white paper. The document, which is being prepared by Michael Gove, will set out the Government’s strategy to improve lives in neglected towns. It is expected to come in the first week of February.
  • As announced last night, the military will be drafted in to tackle illegal immigration in the Channel. Defence chiefs will take charge of efforts to stop the dangerous crossings that have reached record levels this year. Royal Navy boats could be sent to reinforce Border Force’s fleet.

Former minister Tim Loughton yesterday became the sixth Conservative backbencher to call for Mr Johnson to quit. 

The Prime Minister aims to hit back at swelling Tory disquiet with a barrage of policy announcements in the next fortnight in a bid to seize the initiative, dubbed ‘Operation Red Meat’. 

That began last night with the news that the Armed Forces will take control of tackling migrant boats in the Channel.

The Ministry of Defence will take control of the operation within weeks, after the Prime Minister signed off a dramatic change in tactics.

Royal Navy vessels and RAF support are expected to be deployed on patrol in UK territorial waters as part of a policy blitz dubbed Operation Red Meat that Mr Johnson hopes will turn the tide of Tory disquiet at his premiership.

Officials hope the involvement of the Armed Forces will have a significant ‘deterrent effect’.

Government sources pledged the move would result in ‘demonstrable change’ in the Channel crisis, which last year saw a record 28,300 migrants reach the UK from northern France. 

Tory MPs welcomed the move last night. It was the first major announcement as Mr Johnson seeks to get his premiership back on track in the wake of the ‘Partygate’ scandals that have rocked his government.

‘The command of Border Force, which oversees incidents in the Channel, will move over to the Ministry of Defence,’ a Whitehall source said.

‘This will take place by the end of the month or early February. Within a couple of weeks there will be a demonstrable change in how the Channel operation takes place. It makes a lot of sense.’

Home Secretary Priti Patel first requested military involvement in summer 2020, when the numbers crossing from France stood at just a few thousand a year.

Last night a Home Office source said: ‘We’ve been pushing for it for so long, but there has been massive reluctance to act in other parts of government. 

‘Priti has been asking for military defence of UK territorial waters since August 2020 and after months and months of wrangling in Whitehall the PM has agreed with her that we need a change in operational posture.’

Alongside these changes, Mr Johnson is believed to be preparing a cull of his inner circle after the publication of senior civil servant Sue Gray’s report into so-called ‘Partygate’, which could come this week.

Martin Reynolds, his principal private secretary who sent an email inviting staff to ‘bring your own booze’ in the No 10 garden during the first lockdown, and chief-of-staff Dan Rosenfield, are among those seen at risk.

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has also indicated that she wants to put in place a new funding model for the national broadcaster when the current licence fee deal expires in five years’ time.  

The Cabinet minister has hit the Corporation with a two-year licence fee freeze and her allies have warned ‘the days of state-run television are over’, as tensions between the Government and the BBC continue to rise.   

Ms Dorries tweeted this morning: ‘This licence fee announcement will be the last. The days of the elderly being threatened with prison sentences and bailiffs knocking on doors, are over. 

‘Time now to discuss and debate new ways of funding, supporting and selling great British content.’ 

Ms Dorries was speaking as it emerged Boris Johnson was planning a policy blitz dubbed Operation Red Meat, targeting disaffected Tory voters – and MPs – with a series of populist moves including a crackdown on cross-Channel migrants aimed at deflecting attention away from Partygate. 

Tense negotiations between the Government and the BBC over the cost of the annual fee until the end of 2027 have concluded, with Cutlure Secretary Nadine Dorries (above) deciding to hold the licence at £159 for the next two years

Tense negotiations between the Government and the BBC over the cost of the annual fee until the end of 2027 have concluded, with Cutlure Secretary Nadine Dorries (above) deciding to hold the licence at £159 for the next two years

Ms Dorries tweeted this morning that 'this licence fee announcement will be the last'

Ms Dorries tweeted this morning that ‘this licence fee announcement will be the last’

The licence fee currently earns the corporation £3.2 billion a year. Officials calculate that – due to inflation currently running at 5.1 per cent – the Corporation will have to find savings of more than £2 billion over the next six years

 The licence fee currently earns the corporation £3.2 billion a year. Officials calculate that – due to inflation currently running at 5.1 per cent – the Corporation will have to find savings of more than £2 billion over the next six years

The news of the Prime Minister closing ranks comes as it emerges that one Tory MP’s constituency office was hit by graffitists who wrote ‘lies, lies, lies’ on the property.

Others MPs have revealed their inboxes have been flooded with furious constituents reacting to the Partygate scandal. Publicly, at least six Tory MPs have called for Mr Johnson’s resignation. 

Robert Syms, Conservative MP for Poole who was first elected in 1997, told the Telegraph: ‘Like my colleague, Tim Loughton, I am considering whether or not I ought to put in a letter [of no confidence]. 

‘I’ve had emails from what I would call Christian, decent, honest, honourable types of Tory voters, who say they feel embarrassed about voting Conservative with Boris Johnson.’

During his round of broadcast interviews, Conservative Party chairman Oliver Dowden said yesterday the Prime Minister will seek to ‘address the underlying culture in Downing Street’ that led to the scandal. 

But as the Prime Minister’s closest allies rally around him Rishi Sunak, a future Tory leadership contestant, is among a dozen Cabinet ministers whose silence remains deafening since Mr Johnson’s apology last week. 

Mr Downden admitted there were ‘failings’ in No 10, but denied it was a resigning matter for Mr Johnson.

Heold the BBC’s Sunday Morning programme: ‘The Prime Minister is… determined to make sure that this can’t be allowed to happen and that we address the underlying culture in Downing Street.’

But Mr Loughton, a former children’s minister, said ‘terminal damage’ had been done to Mr Johnson.

‘In this case all roads lead back to Downing Street and the person whose name is on the front door,’ the East Worthing and Shoreham MP said yesterday.

For a leadership contest to be triggered, 54 letters of no confidence in Mr Johnson have to be submitted by Tory MPs to Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 backbench committee. 

Royal Navy vessels and RAF support are expected to be deployed on patrol in UK territorial waters in a bid to tackle the migrant crisis in the Channel

Royal Navy vessels and RAF support are expected to be deployed on patrol in UK territorial waters in a bid to tackle the migrant crisis in the Channel

A group of migrants pictured using an inflatable dinghy to make the journey across the Channel to reach the UK in November

A group of migrants pictured using an inflatable dinghy to make the journey across the Channel to reach the UK in November

Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party, has called for Mr Johnson to resign over the party row

Sir Keir Starmer, the leader of the Labour Party, has called for Mr Johnson to resign over the party row

Labour is piling the pressure on the Tories over the revelations. It has published a new campaign poster claiming the 'Tories Aren't Working'

Labour is piling the pressure on the Tories over the revelations. It has published a new campaign poster claiming the ‘Tories Aren’t Working’ 

Tory whips were accused of using ‘dirty tricks’ last night to stop letters being sent, with a handful said to be ‘monitoring’ the corridors outside of the 1922 Committee’s office in Whitehall. 

MPs first elected in 2019 also said they have been warned No 10 would find out if they had sent any dissenting correspondence.

This is despite the fact letters are received in confidence by Sir Graham, who does not publicly state how many he has received.

An MP in the 2019 intake said: ‘It tells you how desperate things have got they are resorting to these underhand tactics. If anything, these sorts of dirty tricks make colleagues more determined to stand up to No 10.’

Downing Street last night dismissed suggestions Mr Johnson had not been totally upfront in his apology last Wednesday, in which he said he attended the May 20 garden party for 25 minutes but understood it to be a ‘work event’.  

A report in the Sunday Times claimed he was warned by ‘at least two people’ that the event being organised in Mr Reynolds’ email amounted to ‘a party’ and should be cancelled – but he dismissed the concerns as an overreaction, praising his private secretary as ‘my loyal labrador’. 

A No 10 spokesman last night said: ‘It is untrue that the Prime Minister was warned about the event in advance.’

The Lib Dems said they have tabled a motion stating Parliament has no confidence in the PM. 

The party wants Tory MPs to back it in a bid to have it debated in the Commons, with leader Sir Ed Davey pushing for a vote on Wednesday. 

Carrie on partying! PM’s wife is accused of breaking social distancing rules while celebrating a friend’s engagement 

Carrie Johnson has been accused of breaching social distancing rules when she celebrated a friend’s engagement just days after the public were warned to keep their distance from people they don’t live with.

Mrs Johnson, 33, the wife of Prime Minister Boris, had been at an engagement celebration for her friend Anna Pinder on September 17, 2020 at The Conduit, a private members’ club in Covent Garden, London.

Mrs Johnson, whose arm is wrapped around Ms Pinder in a picture that circulated online, appears to laugh with her friend as they pose for the snap on a sofa on the club’s outdoor terrace. 

At the time, Brits had been warned that the country was on the cusp of a second wave of Covid infections.

Two metre social distancing guidance and the rule of six, meaning groups of more than half a dozen were restricted from meeting for anything other than work, education or weddings and funerals, were also still in place in September 2020. 

Days before the happy friends were pictured smiling together on their night out, Mr Johnson hosted a press conference in which he reminded the British public they ‘should keep your distance from anyone you don’t live with’. 

A spokeswoman for Mrs Johnson told the Telegraph she ‘regrets the momentary lapse’ of judgement that saw her openly hug her friend despite the guidance in place at the time.  

***
Read more at DailyMail.co.uk