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Boris Johnson accepts he misled parliament over partygate - but says his statements were 'in good faith'


onthedarkside

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In his evidence, the former prime minister accused the privileges committee of having gone "significantly beyond its terms of reference" with its probe into whether he knowingly lied to MPs.

 

He added that it was "unprecedented and absurd" to claim that relying on assurances from "trusted advisers" was "in some way reckless".

 

But the committee hit back with a scathing statement saying the submission contains "no new evidence" in his defence, and an earlier version had to be re-submitted because of "errors and typos".

 

https://news.sky.com/story/boris-johnson-accepts-he-misled-parliament-over-partygate-but-says-his-statements-were-in-good-faith-12838749

 

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12 hours ago, onthedarkside said:

He added that it was "unprecedented and absurd" to claim that relying on assurances from "trusted advisers" was "in some way reckless".

Quite right too and exemption of any future Prime Minister that is running the country with people behind the doors of No. 10 should be left to do just that when there's a pandemic. 

It was all a media witch hunt IMO. 

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17 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

Regarding Covid, Johnson's first reaction was to go for herd immunity, not lockdowns. He changed his mind, and now the mess he is in, and most Brits, is the result.

The results of what.? 

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25 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

That’s not the definition of misleading.


https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mislead

Have you read the contents of your link?

"to lead in a wrong direction or into a mistaken action or belief often by deliberate deceit"

The Oxford English Dictionary definition is;

"mislead" 
"cause to have a wrong impression about someone or something." 

 

You are being pedantic!

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