Kemi Badenoch says partygate was “overblown..”#bbclaurakpic.twitter.com/h8pNZJkgVb
β Haggis_UK π¬π§ πͺπΊ (@Haggis_UK) November 3, 2024
The partygate scandal was βoverblownβ and people should not have been given fixed penalty notices for breaking Covid rules, Kemi Badenoch has said.
The new Tory leader made the surprising comments in her first interview since beating Robert Jenrick in the race to succeed Rishi Sunak.
She also described Boris Johnson as βa great prime ministerβ, even though she was one of dozens of senior Conservatives who resigned from his government.
Johnson and Sunak were also among those who were fined for breaking the Covid rules their own government had drawn up.
Appearing on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg on BBC1, Badenoch said: βI resigned during the Boris Johnson government. I thought he was a great prime minister, but there were some serious issues that were not being resolved.
βI think that during that tenure the public thought we were no longer speaking for them or looking out for them, we were in it for ourselves.
βSome of them I think were perception issues. A lot of the stuff that happened around partygate was not why I resigned, I thought it was overblown. We should not have created fixed penalty notices, for example. That was us not going with our principles.
βAnd then we had the issue with the Chris Pincher scandal, when ministers were sent out to say things that were not true. That was when I decided things had gone too far.β
Asked by Kuenssberg if the public were βwrong to be upset about partygateβ, Badenoch said: βNo, they were not wrong to be upset about partygate.
βThe problem was that we should not have criminalised everyday activities the way that we did. People going out for walks, all of them having fixed penalty notices. That ended up creating a trap for Boris Johnson.β
Kuenssberg then asked: βWasnβt the problem that people in government didnβt obey the rules?β
Badenoch replied: βYes thatβs right, people in government didnβt obey the rules. But they were not MPs, they were often staffers, and I think that the way that we had created those regulations ended up entrapping …β
The presenter then interrupted her to say: βThe prime minister and the chancellor both got fines, it wasnβt just people who worked for them.β
The Tory leader replied: βIndeed, but as we saw with those events, when people see the full story of what happened they understand that problems were created because of the way that we created the regulations.β

