Cummings reveals WhatsApp message which appears to show PM calling Hancock ‘totally f****** hopeless’

Politics

Boris Johnson’s former chief aide has shared a WhatsApp message in which the prime minister appears to call Health Secretary Matt Hancock’s efforts “totally f****** hopeless”.

Dominic Cummings, who has been engaged in a weeks-long feud with Downing Street, published a lengthy blogpost that he claimed showed details of how “Number10/Hancock have repeatedly lied about the failures last year”.

Amid his more than 7,000 words, Mr Cummings also included a series of screenshots from what he said were his WhatsApp exchanges while working in Downing Street during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic last year.

Former special advisor to Boris Johnson, Dominic Cummings, speaks to members of the media
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The PM’s former aide has made another series of explosive claims

In one exchange, which Mr Cummings said was part of late-night messages on 26 March 2020, he and Mr Johnson are shown to be discussing actions from “MH” in boosting the UK’s COVID testing capacity.

The screenshot shows a reply, purportedly from the prime minister, stating: “Totally f****** hopeless”.

Mr Cummings said, shortly after receiving that message from the prime minister, he had a series of missed calls from the prime minister calling to say he’d tested positive for coronavirus.

In another exchange, said to be from 27 April last year, Mr Johnson is said to have openly wondered about taking responsibility for procuring Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) away from Mr Hancock and giving it to Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove.

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The prime minister is claimed to have written: “On ppe it’s a disaster. I can’t think of anything except taking Hancock off and putting Gove on.”

Mr Cummings also used his blogpost to descrive what he said were contrasting styles between the handling of key COVID meetings between Mr Johnson and Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, who deputised for the prime minister after Mr Johnson fell seriously ill with COVID.

The prime minister’s former adviser wrote that meetings under Mr Raab were “less pleasant for everybody but much more productive”.

“Raab can chair meetings properly instead of telling rambling stories and jokes,” Mr Cummings added.

“He let good officials actually question people so we started to get to the truth.

“Unlike the PM who as soon as things get ‘a bit embarrassing’ does the whole ‘let’s take it offline’ shtick before shouting ‘forward to victory’, doing a thumbs-up and pegging it out of the room before anybody can disagree.”

Mr Cummmings also claimed Mr Johnon has a “clear plan” to leave Downing Street “at the latest a couple of years after the next election”, which is scheduled for 2024.

“He wants to make money and have fun not ‘go on and on’,” Mr Cummings wrote.

At the end of his blogpost, Mr Cummings listed a “few simple questions” to ask Mr Johnson.

This included asking why the prime minister kept Mr Hancock in post “given his failures on testing, care homes and PPE” and “how many more people died as a result of your failure to remove him?”.

Mr Cummings also wrote: “Why is No10 lying, including to Parliament, about the fact that the original plan was ‘herd immunity by September’ and had to be abandoned?”

And he also suggested Mr Johnson be asked whether he now agrees “with Hancock that there was no shortage of PPE or do you agree with yourself in April 2020 that PPE supply was ‘a disaster’ that required moving Hancock?”.

Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner branded the accusations from Mr Cummings as “absolutely damning”.

She said a promised public inquiry into the government’s handling of the COVID crisis “can’t wait” until next year, adding: “we can’t allow history to be rewritten.

“In order to get to the truth that public inquiry must begin now.

“Any minister who has been found to have broken the Ministerial Code and lied should and must resign.”

The prime minister declined the opportunity to comment on Mr Cummings’s claims when asked about them during Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday afternoon.

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