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Just blaming Boris is a cop-out – would a different PM have fared any better?

The Covid inquiry has already exposed how unfit Boris Johnson was to lead national efforts to combat a pandemic. But, says Mary Dejevsky, it could yet reveal equally crucial failings in the wider government machinery – as well as some small saving graces

Thursday 02 November 2023 17:19 GMT
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<p>According to WhatsApp messages from the head of the civil service, which were read out at the Covid inquiry, Boris Johnson’s approach to the pandemic was ‘mad and dangerous’ </p>

According to WhatsApp messages from the head of the civil service, which were read out at the Covid inquiry, Boris Johnson’s approach to the pandemic was ‘mad and dangerous’

The past week may well have been the first time that those with a general – rather than personal, or specialist – interest really sat up and took notice of the Covid inquiry.

One reason, of course, was the “star” quality of the witnesses, who included the mercurial Dominic Cummings, catapulted to infamy after fleeing to County Durham and being spotted taking his eye-test drive to Barnard Castle; Martin Reynolds, the smooth ex-diplomat known as “Party Marty”, who had invited his No 10 colleagues to a “bring your own booze” gathering in the Downing Street garden; and the straitlaced Helen MacNamara, the Cassandra who, as deputy cabinet secretary, had warned the PM that “we’re absolutely f*****” over the lack of preparations – only to be one of those fined for a party violation of her own.

Oh dear, oh dear. What with Cummings’s particular way of insulting his co-workers, which prompted solemn trigger-warnings practically every time one of his WhatsApps was read out; the self-righteous apology to “the families of all those who suffered during Covid” with which Reynolds prefaced his answers; and MacNamara’s blithe statement that “it’s hard to pick a day when we did not break lockdown rules”, there was plenty to infuriate those who tuned in to the live-stream.

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