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UK lawmakers OK probe into PM Boris Johnson’s alleged lies

Published:Thursday | April 21, 2022 | 11:27 AM
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson waves as he boards a plane at Stansted Airport, northeast of London, on Wednesday, April 20, 2022, for a visit to India. (Ben Stansall/Pool Photo via AP)

LONDON (AP) — British lawmakers on Thursday ordered a parliamentary investigation into Prime Minister Boris Johnson for allegedly lying about whether he broke coronavirus restrictions by attending illegal gatherings during the pandemic.

The move, approved by cries of “aye” and without a formal vote in the House of Commons, means Parliament's Committee of Privileges will investigate whether Johnson knowingly misled Parliament — historically a resigning offence if proven.

The probe piles more pressure on a Conservative prime minister whose grip on power has been shaken by claims he flouted the pandemic rules he imposed on the country, then repeatedly failed to own up to it.

The move was instigated by the opposition Labour Party and passed after the government abandoned efforts to get Conservative lawmakers to block it.

Johnson's Conservatives have a substantial majority in Parliament, but many lawmakers were uneasy with the prime minister's behaviour.

Labour leader Keir Starmer said the move sought to uphold “the simple principle that honesty, integrity and telling the truth matter in our politics.”

Johnson was not present for the decision on a scandal that has rocked his leadership of the country and the Conservative Party. 

He was more than 4,000 miles away in India, insisting he wanted to “get on with the job” of leading the country.

Johnson was fined 50 pounds by police last week for attending his own birthday party in his office in June 2020, when people in Britain were barred from meeting up with friends and family, or even visiting dying relatives.

Johnson is the first British prime minister ever found to have broken the law while in office.

He has apologised but denied he knowingly broke the rules. Johnson's shifting defence — initially saying there were no illegal gatherings, then claiming it “did not occur to me” that the birthday event was a party — has drawn derision and outrage from opponents, who have called for him to quit.

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