Boris Johnson referred to Treasury as ‘pro-death squad’, Covid inquiry told
Boris Johnson referred to the Treasury as the “pro-death squad” during the pandemic, the Covid-19 inquiry has heard.
The former prime minister reportedly used the phrase at a meeting in January 2021 when he wanted the ministry to back him in arguing for a path to eased restrictions.
Giving evidence to the inquiry today, Johnson’s pandemic-era deputy principal private secretary, Stuart Glassborow, said he did not recall hearing the term.
Reading from former chief scientific adviser to the Government Sir Patrick Vallance’s diary, where the phrase was noted, inquiry counsel Dermot Keating said Johnson had ended a meeting “by saying the team must bring in the pro-death squad from HMT”.
Glassborrow said: “I don’t recall that specific phrase. I see that this is from Patrick’s notebook. I wouldn’t dispute what he’s recorded, but I don’t recall the phrase at all.”
An “enormously chaotic tug of war” existed between the Treasury – which sought measures to curtail the harm to the economy from reduced footfall – and scientific and public health advice, according to an Institute for Government (IfG) report cited by Keating.
Central decision-making in government for much of 2020 was “a bit of a Punch and Judy” because of the dynamic, the report said.
Asked whether he deemed the findings a “fair assessment”, Glassborow replied: “The ability of the Cabinet Office … to bring together the analysis from the science and the health and the economic side to inform the advice it was synthesising, it was bringing together did, as you’d expect, improve over time, through 2020 and into 2021.”
Earlier, the inquiry heard from the Government’s former chief economic adviser, who said the Treasury had “no estimated cost” of a lockdown going into the pandemic.
“I wouldn’t say there was no meaningful modelling, there was a lot of analysis and modelling that happened. What I would say is there was no estimated cost of a lockdown, if you like,” Clare Lombardelli said.
“There was no way to basically say a lockdown will cost you X, or indeed a lockdown of this form will cost you X but of a different form will cost you Y.”
Lombardelli denied the Treasury was “tactical” or selective in how it shared analysis during the pandemic, saying its focus was providing information to ministers in a “pressurised time”. But she acknowledged that data could “potentially” have been shared more widely to improve the quality of modelling.
Lombardelli, who advised Prime Minister Rishi Sunak when he was chancellor, was also asked about the Eat Out to Help Out scheme, through which discounts were offered to encourage people to get back out to restaurants in summer 2020.
The former government adviser, now chief economist at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, said she did not know whether any scientist had been consulted about the policy before it was implemented.
Asked whether the risk of potentially increasing infections was considered in the rollout, she replied: “I don’t know. The policy was conceived in the context that it was safe to lift restrictions and activity could return.”
However, Glassborow said staff inside No10 were aware there was no scientific advice on the scheme’s effect on the virus before it was implemented.
Giving evidence after Lombardelli, Glassborow, a career civil servant, said he and others in Downing Steet knew “there hadn’t been direct CMO [Chief Medical Officer], CSA [Chief Scientific Adviser], Sage [Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies] analysis on this policy”.
The inquiry will later hear from Ben Warner, a former No 10 special adviser.
Press Association — Nina Lloyd and Josh Payne