Boris Johnson will tell police the three leaving parties he attended briefly amid the Covid-19 lockdown were a ‘part of working life’, according to a source.
The Prime Minister, who this week received his questionnaire from police investigating allegations of lockdown-breaching parties in No 10, is expected to claim the parties were a function of his job.
Mr Johnson, who has appointed a lawyer to work on his responses, is believed to have attended six of the 12 Downing Street parties being probed by Scotland Yard.
But he is expected to use his call logs and his diary to show how he was at three leaving parties for only a brief period of time before carrying on with work, The Times reports.
Boris Johnson (leaving Downing Street) will tell police the three leaving parties he attended briefly were a function of his job
A source told The Times: ‘Saying goodbye to staff is part of working life.’
The Metropolitan Police has begun sending questions to up to 50 people in No 10 believed to have attended the illicit gatherings during lockdown, including the Prime Minister and reportedly his wife Carrie Johnson.
The move means Mr Johnson will have to provide a credible reason as to why he was at events held during coronavirus restrictions or face a fine.
Mr Johnson is believed to have attended as many as six of the parties being investigating by the Metropolitan Police.
One such party was allegedly organised by Carrie Johnson in the official Downing Street residence on November 13, 2020.
Another was the ‘bring your own booze’ garden which took place during the first lockdown in May 2020.
No 10 confirmed last week that the Prime Minister had received the legal form from Metropolitan Police officers and said he would ‘respond as required’.
A No 10 spokesman said: ‘We can confirm the Prime Minister has received a questionnaire from the Metropolitan Police. He will respond as required.’
The Met Police say the questionnaires asks for an ‘account and explanation of the recipient’s participation in an event’ and have ‘formal legal status and must be answered truthfully’.
Mr Johnson is believed to have attended as many as six of the parties being investigating by the Metropolitan Police. One of the parties under investigation is the ‘bring your own booze’ garden in May 2020 (pictured)
More Tory MPs are poised to call for the PM to go if he is found to have broken his own coronavirus laws, or further damaging details emerge from the Sue Gray (pictured) inquiry
Officers working on Operation Hillman are sending the questionnaires to more than 50 individuals across Downing Street and wider Government as they investigate the events.
Downing Street shared that Mr Johnson had received the questionnaire shortly before 10pm last Friday amid a mounting crisis in Ukraine and fears that Russia could invade its neighbour.
Outgoing Met Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick this week suggested some of those being contacted by officers will end up with fines.
‘Clearly, some, but probably not all, of those people may very well end up with a ticket,’ she told BBC Radio London.
Meanwhile former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said it would be ‘very tough’ for Mr Johnson to cling on to power if he was fined.
‘It will be difficult, he knows that,’ the senior MP said in an interview with the i newspaper.
Outgoing Met Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick this week suggested some of those being contacted by officers will end up with fines
Sir Iain added: ‘If you’ve set the laws, and you break them and the police decide you have broken them… and then there’s the unredacted (Sue Gray) report – the two things will come together.’
Fifteen Tory MPs have publicly called for Mr Johnson to go, while more are thought to have privately written to the 1922 Committee of backbench Tories calling for a no confidence vote.
More are poised to do so if the Prime Minister is found to have broken his own coronavirus laws, or further damaging details emerge from the Sue Gray inquiry.
The PM will face a vote of no confidence if 54 Conservatives write to 1922 Committee chair Sir Graham Brady, and would be ousted if more than half of his MPs subsequently voted against him.