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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Kate Devlin

The woman inside Downing Street who Boris fired gives her verdict on the ex-PM

PA

The former deputy chief of staff to Boris Johnson has poured fuel on the latest Partygate allegations engulfing the former prime minister by saying that the scandal risks being the “last nail in the coffin” of his political career.

Cleo Watson, who says she was like a “nanny” to the former PM during the Covid lockdown, also gave him just five out of 10 for morality in her first television interview to launch her new book Whips, a raunchy bonkbuster set in Westminster.

She warned that “dozens” more people could face investigations if the police decide to launch a fresh inquiry into alleged Covid breaches at Chequers.

Nicknamed “the Gazelle” for her elegant 6ft stature, Ms Watson worked alongside Mr Johnson’s former chief adviser Dominic Cummings – and, like her colleague, she was fired by Mr Johnson.

Cleo Watson lifts the lid on what it was really like to work for Boris Johnson (The Independent)

In her interview with Independent TV, she talked candidly and revealingly about life inside No 10, with its tensions, infighting and partying. While critical of Mr Johnson, she expressed embarrassment at her own police fine for being present at a No 10 party while Covid restrictions were in place.

She also suggested it would be “respectful” to the Covid-bereaved for Mr Johnson to pay his own legal fees now that he is earning more than £1m a month from his speeches.

Ms Watson also:

  • claimed the former prime minister was “defined by Partygate”
  • revealed that illicit encounters were commonplace at party conferences
  • warned that No 10 was the kind of building where it was difficult not to “rub up against each other”

The Partygate scandal erupted again when it emerged that Mr Johnson had been referred to police over fresh claims he broke lockdown rules. The allegations centre on around a dozen gatherings at No 10 and at the prime minister’s grace-and-favour country house, Chequers.

New details were sent to the police by the Cabinet Office, prompting fevered speculation over who might have attended the alleged events. Those whose names were suggested include some of Mr Johnson and his wife Carrie’s closest allies.

Boris’s former aide gives him 5/10 moral rating

Asked how many people could face questions if a police investigation is launched, Ms Watson said the figure could be “dozens”.

She said: “It is up to them to decide if they want to investigate this, but it's two different [police] forces. And, as I understand it, they’re looking at multiple events. So, you know, it could be dozens [of people].”

The latest development could be the final blow to Mr Johnson’s political career, said Ms Watson.

“I think so,” she said. “It’s my view that he’s making his money, he’s writing his books, he’s got a lovely new baby on the way... why would he want a further political career? But if he does want to, this is potentially the last nail in the coffin.”

Describing the man she saw in Downing Street every day, she painted a vivid picture of someone who was “disorganised ... an interesting character study to be around, and ambitious”.

When asked what score she would give the former prime minister out of 10 for morality, she said: “Five.”

And she warned that he would never be able to escape the Partygate scandal.

Prime minister Boris Johnson and Cleo Watson in Downing Street in 2020 ahead of a cabinet meeting at the Foreign Office (PA)

Mr Johnson was fined by police after stories emerged of parties in No 10 during lockdown, and the resulting furore eventually saw him ousted from office by his own Tory MPs. An inquiry by top civil servant Sue Gray later ruled that there had been a “serious failure” of the leadership to abide by the “standards expected of the entire British population” during the pandemic.

Ms Gray’s long-awaited report also concluded that “too little thought” had been given by those in No 10 to the risks the gatherings presented to public health, and to how they might appear to the public.

Asked about Mr Johnson’s rule-breaking, Ms Watson said: “He’s obviously defined by Partygate, so that’s a pretty obvious part of the rules. But in terms of political rules over the years, he’s defied them at every point, and it’s worked for him.”

She also suggested that the former London mayor was a tragic figure.

“I think there’s always something quite tragic about things not panning out for someone the way they wanted them to,” she said. “He obviously wanted this so badly, and yeah, that is hard, but these are his own mistakes.”

She said that Covid had offered him “an opportunity to defy his detractors and show himself as someone incredibly diligent and hardworking and decisive”. “And so, as difficult as it is – and I do feel for him on that – it must be pretty devastating, shy of 60, to be having to kind of reassess a lot of your life. But the buck does stop with him,” she added.

Cleo Watson reveals that Downing Street is a funny place where colleagues ‘rub up against each other’

Ms Watson said she “couldn’t apologise more” for the event in Downing Street for which she also was fined by police. But she said it was a “great shock” to read about instances of events in No 10 where people were “partying and being sick and throwing wine up the walls”.

She suggested that Mr Johnson, who has made millions of pounds since leaving office, should pay for his own legal fees as part of the parliamentary inquiry into Partygate.

“I think it would be very respectful, particularly with these new allegations coming forward, if he did pick up the bill personally ... I think it would be respectful to lots of Covid-bereaved families in particular.”

It emerged on Wednesday that Mr Johnson had sacked his government-appointed defence team after the Cabinet Office passed information to police on the latest alleged breaches.

Ms Watson also suggested that the annual conferences held by political parties every autumn are a hotbed of illicit sex.

There is, she said, “the opportunity” for sex in parliament, adding: “It’s obviously got nooks and crannies. There’s alcohol, they [MPs] are there late. I mean, there are those kinds of opportunities for sure.”

She added: “Every party conference, regardless of the party, people make fools of themselves.”

She also described No 10 as a “strange building” in which it was difficult to “not to literally rub up against each other”. “And I think that’s where some of this trouble set in. Perhaps not helped by the culture being set from the top.”

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