UK chief nurse says she was ‘dropped’ from briefing during Dominic Cummings storm

world
Uk Chief Nurse Says She Was ‘Dropped’ From Briefing During Dominic Cummings Storm
Share this article
Press Association
The UK's chief nursing officer Ruth May has confirmed she was dropped from a government press briefing at Downing St during the lockdown travel storm surrounding Boris Johnson's adviser Dominic Cummings.

She had been due to appear alongside Health Secretary Matt Hancock on June 1, but was cut when she felt unable to defend the Prime Minister’s chief adviser, according to The Independent.

Ministers had previously denied that Ms May was blocked from taking questions because she refused to defend Mr Cummings after he moved his family 260 miles from London to Durham to stay on his parents’ farm while strict travel restrictions were in place during the lockdown.

Advertisement
I believe that, in my opinion, the rules are clear and they are there for everyone’s safety and they applied to us all

But speaking to MPs on Monday, Ms May confirmed she had prepared for a press conference in June but was stood down.

She told the Commons Public Accounts Committee she did not know why she was dropped.

“It is indeed true that I was dropped from a briefing but that happens to many of my colleagues as well,” Ms May told MPs.

“That is a regular occurrence.”

Advertisement

Pushed on why she was not allowed to appear, she said: “I don’t know why I was dropped, chair.”

Ms May, asked whether it was requested that she defend Mr Cummings, she said: “At all press briefings, we talk about a lot of these preparation questions.

Dominic Cummings, the PM’s chief aide, took his family from London to Durham during the lockdown (Jonathan Brady/PA)
Dominic Cummings, the PM’s chief aide, took his family from London to Durham during the lockdown (Jonathan Brady/PA)

“And yes, of course, I was asked about lockdown and rules to lockdown, yes.”

Ms May said she thought the stay-at-home lockdown rules applied to everyone in the country.

Advertisement

She said: “I believe that, in my opinion, the rules are clear and they are there for everyone’s safety and they applied to us all.”

Her words echoed those of deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam who, when asked about Mr Cummings’ example at a briefing on May 30, had said lockdown rules “apply to all”.

In its initial story, the Independent quoted an NHS source saying Ms May was dropped had been dropped after saying she would follow the example set Prof Van-Tam, who was also then allegedly blacklisted for a number of weeks.

Deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said at a briefing on May 30 that the lockdown rules ‘apply to all’ (Pippa Fowles/10 Downing Street/Crown Copyright/PA)
Deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said at a briefing on May 30 that the lockdown rules ‘apply to all’ (Pippa Fowles/10 Downing Street/Crown Copyright/PA)

A second source reportedly told the media outlet: “Everyone is being asked to support the Government positions prior to doing a press conference.

Advertisement

“If they don’t, they get dropped.”

Layla Moran MP, the Liberal Democrat leadership candidate, said the incident suggested ministers were “happy to silence the science when it suits them”.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps had defended the Government against the allegations during a media briefing on June 12.

When asked about the claims last month, Mr Shapps said: “I don’t think it is true.

“She (Ms May) has attended them many times before.

“I notice that at the top of the No 10 Twitter feed I see one of her tweets pinned.

“I am absolutely sure she has been a regular contributor before and I am sure she will be back here again.”

National medical director of NHS England, said at the time he did not know anything about the row over Ms May.

The Government put a stop to the daily press conference on June 23, instead opting to restate them for announcements on an ad-hoc basis.

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps
© BreakingNews.ie 2024, developed by Square1 and powered by PublisherPlus.com