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Humbled British PM apologizes after fine for lockdown birthday bash

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson apologized but defied calls to resign on Tuesday after being fined for breaking coronavirus lockdown rules by attending a gathering in his office to celebrate his birthday.
Johnson said people had the right to expect better after he, his wife, and his Finance Minister Rishi Sunak were fined for breaching laws his government brought in to curb COVID-19.
“It didn’t occur to me that, as I say, that I was in breach of the rules. I now humbly accept that I was,” Johnson said. “I think the best thing I can do now is, having settled the fine, is focus on the job and that’s what I’m going to do.”
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Police have been investigating 12 gatherings at Johnson’s Downing Street office and the Cabinet Office after a damning internal inquiry found his staff had enjoyed unauthorized alcohol-fueled parties.
Johnson said he had attended some of the events, held when social mixing was all but banned, but he has always denied knowingly committing any wrongdoing.
Tuesday’s fine, one of more than 50 police said they would issue, related to a gathering in the Cabinet Room of Downing Street to mark his 56th birthday on June 19, 2020, an event which he said lasted no more than 10 minutes.
“I understand the anger that many will feel that I, myself, fell short, when it came to observing the very rules which the government I lead had introduced to protect the public,” he said in a televised interview from his country residence Chequers.
It is believed to be the first time a British leader has been found to have broken the law while in office.
Revelations about boozy Downing Street parties provoked resignation calls from lawmakers in his own Conservative Party earlier this year. However, that pressure has abated with the war in Ukraine in which he has sought to play a leading role in the West’s response.
After the events were first reported in late 2021, Johnson said there were no parties and that all rules were followed.
He later apologized to parliament for attending one event, which he said he thought was work-related. He also apologized to Queen Elizabeth for another at which staff partied on the eve of her husband's funeral.
In June 2020, when Johnson’s birthday party took place, people from different households were not allowed to meet indoors and were asked to maintain a two-meter distance from each other.
Opposition Labor leader Keir Starmer said Johnson and Sunak had dishonored the sacrifices people had made during the pandemic as well as their own offices of state.
“This is the first time in the history of our country that a prime minister has been found to be in breach of the law, and then he lied repeatedly to the public about it,” Starmer said.
“Britain deserves better, they have to go.”

Majority think he should quit

A snap poll for YouGov found 57 percent of voters thought he should resign and 75 percent believed he had knowingly lied. In another survey by Savanta ComRes, 61 percent said he should quit.
The prime minister’s immediate future will be determined by Conservative lawmakers, who can trigger a leadership challenge if 54 of the party’s 360 parliamentary members demand a confidence vote.
Some of those who have previously called for his head said now was not the time.
“In the middle of war in Europe, when Vladimir Putin is committing war crimes and the UK is Ukraine’s biggest ally, as President [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy said at the weekend, it wouldn’t be right to remove the prime minister at this time,” said Douglas Ross, leader of the Scottish Conservative Party.
Others warned Johnson’s long-term position was still far from secure. “This not the end of this matter,” Conservative lawmaker Andrew Bridgen said.
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