Partygate panel to publish inquiry report after Boris Johnson quits as MP

(Victoria Jones/PA)
A report into whether Boris Johnson misled MPs over his partygate assurances will be published âpromptlyâ after the former prime ministerâs decision to dramatically quit the Commons.
The UK'sCommons Privileges Committee said the cross-party panel of MPs will meet on Monday to complete its inquiry.
It comes after Mr Johnson launched a blistering attack on the Conservative-majority committee, comparing it to a âkangaroo courtâ and a âwitch huntâ, as he announced his intention to stand down as an MP and trigger an immediate by-election.
In a statement, a spokesman said: âThe committee has followed the procedures and the mandate of the House at all times and will continue to do so.
âMr Johnson has departed from the processes of the House and has impugned the integrity of the House by his statement.
âThe committee will meet on Monday to conclude the inquiry and to publish its report promptly.â
Mr Johnson had accused the probe, chaired by veteran Labour MP Harriet Harman, of âbiasâ and suggested it was attempting to use its investigation to âdrive me out of Parliamentâ in a move he said was motivated by a desire to reverse Brexit.
Several reports have suggested the committee had ruled that Mr Johnson did lie to the Commons when he said that covid rules were followed in Downing Street following reports that lockdown-busting parties were held during the pandemic.

The committee was said to be recommending a 10-day suspension from the Commons, a conclusion which would have resulted in a recall petition among his constituents and a potential by-election in his Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency.
Mhairi Black, SNP deputy Westminster leader, said the former No 10 incumbent âjumped before he was pushedâ.
The former Conservative Party leaderâs announcement that he was quitting as an MP came only hours after his resignation honours list had been published, in which he gave peerages, knighthoods and damehoods to close allies.
Mr Johnsonâs resignation means Rishi Sunakâs Tories face a tough battle to hold onto his old seat at an upcoming by-election.
Polling released by Savanta suggested Labour, which was 7,000 votes behind in second place at the 2019 election in Uxbridge, currently holds a 14-point lead over the Tories in Mr Johnsonâs former west London constituency.
Even before Mr Johnsonâs decision to stand down, the constituency was already in Labourâs top 100 target seats at the next election, which is expected to be held next year, as Sir Keir Starmer seeks a majority to put him into Downing Street.
The contest was the second by-election triggered on Friday following former culture secretary Nadine Dorriesâ decision to quit the Commons immediately, rather than wait until the next election.

Mr Johnson said he was âstepping down forthwithâ after receiving a letter from Ms Harmanâs inquiry setting out its position.
However, he left the door open to making a return to frontline politics, saying he was leaving Parliament âfor nowâ.
In a scathing attack on the Privileges Committee, he accused the MPs of producing a yet-to-be-published report âriddled with inaccuracies and reeks of prejudiceâ while providing him with âno formal ability to challenge anything they sayâ.
âThey know that I corrected the record as soon as possible; and they know that I and every other senior official and minister â including the current Prime Minister and then occupant of the same building, Rishi Sunak â believed that we were working lawfully together,â he said.
âI did not lie, and I believe that in their hearts the committee know it.â
He said he was âbewildered and appalledâ at being âforced out, anti-democraticallyâ by a probe that he claimed had set out from the beginning to âfind me guilty, regardless of the factsâ.
The Privileges Committee inquiry into Mr Johnsonâs partygate comments is made up of seven MPs, with the four Tories â Sir Bernard Jenkin, Sir Charles Walker, Alberto Costa and Andy Carter â holding the majority.
Their inquiry took both written and oral evidence from Mr Johnson, along with other witnesses, with the former British leader giving testimony during a lengthy session held in March.

In his resignation statement, Mr Johnson was also critical of Mr Sunakâs administration, questioning the decision to increase taxes and abandoning the prospect of a free trade deal with the US.
But he said the Tory Party has the âtime to recover its mojo and its ambition and to win the next electionâ.
Mr Johnson became prime minister four years after returning as an MP, having stood down as MP for Henley in 2008 after being elected mayor of London, replacing Theresa May in Downing Street in 2019.
His landslide election victory at that yearâs snap winter general election allowed him to deliver on taking the UK out of the European Union.
Mr Johnson left office in September after repeated scandals including the partygate row over lockdown breaches in Downing Street, the Owen Paterson lobbying affair and his handling of complaints against former deputy chief whip Chris Pincher.
Deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner said the British public was âsick to the back teeth of this never ending Tory soap opera played out at their expenseâ as she urged voters to âturn the page with a fresh startâ under a Labour government.
Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper said it was âgood riddanceâ to Mr Johnson.