Sue Gray and Boris Johnson had a private meeting to discuss the handling of the partygate report, Sky News has revealed.

The pair discussed where Ms Gray believed the Metropolitan Police were with the inquiry, and Whitehall’s understanding of where the police were on interviews.
The revelation of an undisclosed meeting is likely to trigger surprise given the forthcoming report has repeatedly been described as independent.


Further details of the meeting are sketchy, with confusion over whether the inclusion of pictures in the report was discussed and who initiated the meeting.

The prime minister is saying he wants to disclose the maximum available information now to get the issue out of the way so would not have pressured her to drop the report, it is claimed.

The pair would not have discussed the judgements senior civil servant Ms Gray was preparing to come to in the report, multiple sources say.
Earlier, a Downing Street spokesman said he would “not get into specifics” when put to him that Ms Gray’s team had been in contact with the prime minister about the forthcoming report.

Just earlier today, asked whether Downing Street was negotiating over who is named in Ms Gray’s report, the spokesman added: “Sue Gray is compiling the report independently and how she does that, and the contents of it, and what is presented is entirely a matter for her.”

However all sides are likely to argue the meeting was above board given Mr Johnson commissioned the report.
Earlier in the process there were robust procedures to ensure Number 10 did not know about the contents of the interim report.

The meeting is understood to have taken place on a date before the Commons voted to refer Mr Johnson to the privileges committee which happened on 21 April.

On Thursday, the Metropolitan Police confirmed they had ended their investigation into lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street and Whitehall, and had given out 126 fines for 83 people.

The £460,000 investigation into the partygate scandal, which has lasted nearly four months, has already resulted in fines for the PM his wife Carrie and Chancellor Rishi Sunak over a birthday gathering for the prime minister.
Helen Ball, acting deputy commissioner of the Met Police, said: “A number of people, members of the public, have been both surprised and concerned at what they have heard. And I’m sure they will be surprised and concerned about the outcome of our investigation.”

After the end of the inquiry, Downing Street said the prime minister had been told that there would be no further action against him.
The PM’s official spokesman said: “He’s pleased the investigation’s concluded but at no point has it distracted him from the important issues facing the country.”

It is also understood that Carrie Johnson has also been told there will be no further action against her.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, who has called for Mr Johnson to quit over his fine, said the investigation had shown “industrial scale law breaking in Downing Street… that reflects a culture and the prime minister sets the culture”.

The investigation saw the Metropolitan Police make referrals for fixed penalty notices (FPNs) – which have been or will be issued – in relation to events on eight dates from May 2020 to April 2021.

Police said a team of 12 detectives had trawled through 345 documents including emails, door logs, diary entries and witness statements, 510 photographs and CCTV images and 204 questionnaires in what they described as a “careful and thorough” investigation.
Detectives have not publicly disclosed the identities of those fined. It is known that among them is former government ethics chief Helen MacNamara, who apologised for an “error of judgement”.

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