Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson confessed this Friday that he regretted having asked for forgiveness for the parties held in Downing Street during the pandemic Covid-19a scandal known as ‘Partygate‘ that It cost him his resignation.
In an interview on the ITV channel six days after the publication of his political memoirs, the former conservative leader explained that when apologize and “inadvertently” accepted all the accusations towards various officials of his Government who were affected by the scandal, and that it was not “fair” for them.
“Do you regret asking the Queen for forgiveness?” asked ITV journalist Tom Bradby, to which the former prime minister refused to answer, simply pointing out that he was not going to talk about his conversations with the deceased. Elizabeth II.
Bradby also mentioned a leaked email from Johnson’s then-secretary Martin Reynoldsin which he invited more than 100 people to a “socially distanced” drinking party in the courtyard of his official residence; To which Johnson said that he did not believe that the officials thought they were breaking the rules and that they were working around the clock.
“The reason why The Downing Street garden was used because it was thought to be a much safer environment. and we had to keep our distance,” he defended.
Johnson, who came to power with an absolute majority in December 2019, pointed to his predecessor David Cameron for resigning after Brexit and criticized him for not having a subsequent plan: “It is not normal for the prime minister, after having requested a referendum vote, to suddenly leave the stage.”
Likewise, the former conservative leader did not closed the door to a possible return to the front line of British politics, stating that the chances were as good as “being reincarnated into an olive tree, being blinded by a champagne cork, being locked in a disused refrigerator, or being decapitated by a Frisbee.”
However, Johnson uttered the same cryptic phrase in 2015, after being asked if he would like to succeed David Cameron as prime minister.
On the other hand, the former prime minister avoided answering questions such as who is his favorite candidate for the US elections, or Who do you prefer as the next leader of the Conservative Party, although he hinted that Robert Jenrick, or whoever had been the Worst Prime Minister, whether Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak.
The former leader of the British conservatives will publish his political memoirs on October 10, Untiedof more than 700 pages, which began to be published in installments last Friday in the Daily Mail with some controversial statements about their plans to invade the Netherlands to recover doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine during the pandemic.
Johnson was scheduled to give his first television statements this Thursday on the BBC, but the interview was finally canceled after journalist Laura Kuenssberg mistakenly sent questions to the former prime minister before broadcast.
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