THE Tory government’s former ethics chief has been fined by the Metropolitan Police for her involvement in the partygate scandal.
Helen MacNamara, who used to be the deputy cabinet secretary, is said to be among the first group of people to receive a fixed-penalty notice (FPN) from Scotland Yard as part of its investigation into alleged lockdown-breaching parties in Downing Street and Whitehall.
The Daily Telegraph reported that MacNamara received a £50 fine on Friday in connection with a leaving do held in the Cabinet Office on June 18, 2020, to mark the departure of a private secretary.
Meanwhile, The Guardian reported others had been fined for a gathering held on the eve of the Duke of Edinburgh’s funeral last year. These FPNs were among the initial round of 20 issued by the Metropolitan Police.
MacNamara was the director general of propriety and ethics in the Cabinet Office from 2018 to 2020.
The purpose of the role was to ensure the highest standards of propriety, integrity and governance within Government.
She was promoted to the post of deputy cabinet secretary in March 2020 and later left Government to work for the Premier League.
The leaving do in 70 Whitehall on June 18, 2020, was reportedly held for Hannah Young, a former home affairs policy adviser who was taking up the post of deputy consul general in New York.
There were said to be about 20 people present, with alcohol consumed.
It was reported that advisers and civil servants gathered after work for two separate events on April 16, 2021, shortly after the death of the Duke of Edinburgh.
One was for former Downing Street director of communications James Slack, now deputy editor of the Sun, and the second for a photographer, and they were later reported to have merged.
No 10 staff were said to have partied until the early hours of the morning in a seven-hour drinking session.
Takeaway pizzas were reported to have been ordered in and some of the revellers were said to have used a slide belonging to Johnson’s son, Wilfred.
The following day, the Queen sat alone – socially distanced from her family – as she said goodbye to her husband.
No 10 previously said an apology had been extended to Buckingham Palace.
It has also been suggested by ITV News that Johnson will not be interviewed by the Metropolitan Police as part of their partygate investigation.
READ MORE: Drinks parties 'held in House of Commons during lockdown'
This is because the force is not interviewing those who have received questionnaires as part of the inquiries, and could potentially be fined, the broadcaster said.
Conservative MP Steve Brine on Sunday night called for transparency about who has been issued with fines.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour, the MP for Winchester said: “They should just be honest about who’s been tipped off with what and put it all out there and say, you know what, we got this wrong, or this person’s got this fine, because these guys in the press, they won’t focus on the issues of the local election, they’ll scratch around and try and dig all this stuff up again.”
The Met is investigating 12 events, including as many as six that Johnson is said to have attended, and has sent out more than 100 questionnaires. The PM received his in February.
ITV said the only officials being interviewed are “witnesses”, whose role is to help the police interpret questionnaires submitted by other people.
“The Met are not interviewing those who received questionnaires and are in the frame to be fined,” it said.
No 10 has so far only promised to confirm if Johnson or Cabinet Secretary Simon Case are given an FPN.
The PM is not said to have attended either the June 18, 2020, gathering or the events on April 16 2021.
The Met declined to comment. The Cabinet Office also said it had nothing to add, beyond pointing to a statement from Scotland Yard issued earlier this week.
One Tory minister insisted on Monday morning that his boss should remain in place because “the world has moved on”.
Welsh Secretary Simon Hart claimed the “vast majority” of voters in his constituency want Johnson to carry on.
He told Sky News: “We all make judgements that we’ve had time to reflect on and wish we’d made differently. For me personally, I think the world has moved on a considerable distance.
“I trust the views of the people who elected me in saying ’look, put this problem right, make sure you apologise, you acted inappropriately at the time’. But the idea that every politician, or indeed every journalist for that matter, who makes a misjudgment along the way should automatically be sacked is not something I subscribe to.”
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