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UK minister quits over PM's top aide taking trip during lockdown

This article is more than 12 months old

LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government was hit by its first resignation yesterday over the controversy surrounding top aide Dominic Cummings' cross-country trip during the coronavirus lockdown.

Undermining attempts by ministers to try and move on from the crisis which has dominated British politics for days, Mr Douglas Ross, a minister for Scotland, quit in protest.

"I have constituents who didn't get to say goodbye to loved ones; families who could not mourn together; people who didn't visit sick relatives because they followed the guidance of the government," he said in a Twitter statement announcing his departure.

"I cannot in good faith tell them they were all wrong and one senior adviser to the government was right."

He added that Mr Cummings' interpretation of government rules was "not shared by the vast majority of people".

PRESSURE

The resignation will pile more pressure on Mr Cummings, who held an extraordinary press conference on Monday to justify driving his wife and young son on a 425km trip from London to Durham in the north-east of England during the height of the coronavirus crisis.

Not long after Mr Ross quit, Ms Harriet Baldwin joined a growing list of Conservative MPs calling on Mr Cummings to resign.

Tory party grandee Michael Heseltine told Sky News that "the lack of credibility" in Mr Cummings' version of events was "damaging the government". Some members of the clergy as well as opposition party members have also called on him to stand down.

The resignation came after a Cabinet heavyweight defended Mr Cummings and said the controversial aide did not break the law. Mr Michael Gove, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said Mr Cummings had acted reasonably in driving from London to Durham and then taking a separate journey to a local beauty spot, Barnard Castle, to - as he claimed - test his eyesight.

"What's clear is that he didn't break the law, he didn't break the rules, he sought to protect his family and he also sought to ensure that the risk of anyone in his family infecting anyone else was absolutely minimised," Mr Gove told the BBC yesterday.

Mr Cummings drove to his parents' home in Durham after feeling ill because he and his wife, who was also feeling unwell, needed possible back-up childcare for their young son.

Despite calls for him to resign, Mr Cummings has so far resisted and instead defended his actions. He told reporters he had acted "reasonably and legally".

The prime minister called Mr Cummings' actions "plausible".

Also yesterday, the Office for National Statistics said the number of deaths in Britain "involving" the coronavirus had risen above 46,000, far higher than the 36,914 deaths officially confirmed in the government's count. - AFP

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