Boris Johnson sorry for party as Labour calls apology a joke

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BBC Online :
Boris Johnson has faced fury in the Commons after receiving a fine from the police for breaking lockdown laws.
Most Tory MPs rallied behind the PM as he repeatedly apologised for attending a birthday party in Downing Street in 2020, saying he did not think he was breaking the law at the time.
But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer called his apology “a joke” as MPs from all parties criticised his behaviour.
Tory MP Mark Harper called on the PM to quit over his “indefensible” actions.
Labour has secured a vote on Thursday on whether a Commons committee should investigate if the PM misled Parliament.
Knowingly misleading Parliament is a resigning offence under government rules.
If MPs vote for an inquiry, the privileges committee – made up of seven MPs – could recommend sanctions, including an apology, a suspension or even expulsion from the Commons.
But the move is unlikely to succeed because the majority of Conservative MPs are standing by the PM, and they are likely to be ordered to vote against the Labour motion.
Asked directly by Tory MP Peter Bone if he had deliberately misled MPs in his past statements on Downing Street parties, Mr Johnson said: “No.”
Last week saw Mr Johnson become the first sitting prime minister to be sanctioned for breaking the law when he was fined by the Metropolitan Police, alongside his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak, over a birthday gathering for the PM in No 10 in June 2020.
The PM and others who partied in Downing Street during lockdown are widely expected to receive further fines, as the police continue their investigation.
But in his first Commons statement on his law-breaking, Mr Johnson said he wanted to get on with the job of “delivering on the priorities of the country at a difficult time”.
He told MPs: “It did not occur to me then or subsequently that a gathering in the Cabinet Room just before a vital meeting on Covid strategy could amount to a breach of the rules.

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