BORIS Johnson today pleaded "hand on heart" that he didn't lie to MPs about illegal No.10 lockdown gatherings - and fumed he's "boggled" the Met Police fined him over partygate.
This afternoon the aggravated ex-PM gave evidence in an explosive four hour hearing of the Privileges Committee.
Before an audience of MPs and journalists, he desperately tried to convince the committee's seven members he didn't deliberately lie when he told the Commons multiple times that rules were always followed in Downing Street.
The showstopper session opened this afternoon with BoJo swearing on King James' bible that he'll only tell the committee the truth.
The ex-PM then launched into an opening statement, where he pleaded his case.
"There were a number of days over a period of 20 months when gatherings took place in Downing Street that went past the point where they could be said to be necessary for work purposes," he insisted.
"That was wrong. I bitterly regret it."
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Mr Johnson apologised for "inadvertently misleading this House" but added "that I did it recklessly or deliberately is completely untrue".
As the hearing dragged on, an increasingly frustrated BoJo fumed: "People who say that we were partying during lockdown simply have no idea what they are talking about."
The ex-PM turned fire on his former aide turned arch nemesis Dominic Cummings.
Mr Johnson accused him of being the only No.10 official to suggest he's a vindictive liar.
And he slammed outcast Mr Cummings as having "every motive to lie".
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Boris entered the hearing flanked by his most loyal MP lieutenants and legal team.
James "Dudders" Dudridge, Lia Nici and former Secretary Jacob Rees-Mogg were among those present to back their boy.
Mr Johnson pointed to official No.10 photos of the infamous lockdown parties as evidence he can't have known they were rule breaking.
He argued: "To say that we would have held illicit events in No.10 while allowing these events to be immortalized by an official photographer is staggeringly implausible."
The ex-PM insisted social distancing rules were always followed in Downing Street "to the best of our ability".
But he added it was "impossible" to always maintain social distancing in No.10.
"It was always the case the confines of No.10 were going to make it impossible the whole time to enforce total social distancing, as it were with an electric forcefield around every individual."
BoJo went on to justify his attendance at boozy leaving dos for staff.
"I will believe until the day I die that it was my job to thank staff for what they had done," he said.
Who sits on the privileges committee?
The Commons Privileges Committee comprises seven members. It's temporary Chair, Harriet Harman, is a Labour MP. She was appointed after former Chair Sir Chris Bryant recused himself from the role. The committee's cross-party split reflects the make-up of the Commons.
- Harriet Harman - Labour MP for Camberwell and Peckham
- Yvonne Fovargue - Labour MP for Makerfield
- Andy Carter - Tory MP for Warrington South
- Sir Charles Walker - Tory MP for Broxbourne
- Alberto Costa - Tory MP for South Leicestershire
- Sir Bernard Jenkin - Conservative MP for Harwich and North Essex
- Allan Dorans - SNP MP for Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock
He also blasted claims the famous birthday gathering in No.10 was a fun-filled festive affair.
The event, which included snacks and cake, was probed by the Met Police and resulted in a fine for Rishi Sunak and his predecessor.
Mr Johnson's wife Carrie and No.10 flat interior designer Lulu Lytle also famously attended the do.
But during the hearing Boris said the penalty “boggled my mind”.
He insisted he couldn't have known the birthday bash was illegal because his press team briefed the event to The Times newspaper days after it took place.
Boris said: "On my birthday, I came back from a long external visit. I thought (the gathering) was a reasonably necessary for work purposes because I'm standing at my desk surrounded by officials who asked to come and wish me happy birthday.
"I only recently recovered from Covid and it seemed to me to be a perfectly proper thing to do."
Mr Johnson also hit out at the Privileges Committee, accusing its investigation of being "extremely peculiar".
He argued the panel don't have a shred of documentary evidence he was warned that rules were being broken.
And he suggested the scope of the probe has been unfairly expanded to investigate whether he lied out of recklessness rather than just outright deliberately.
"It would be one thing if the Committee had come here and said here are the emails or WhatsApps that show you were warned about rule-breaking before you made your statements to the House," Boris said.
"You haven't got any such evidence because that never happened. But if you now say instead that it must have been obvious that we were going against the rules and guidance then let's be clear about what you are saying."
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After today's mega showdown, the committee will take time to consider Boris' oral evidence, as well as submissions from dozens of No.10 staff members and aides.
If he's found guilty, the ex-PM faces being suspended from the Commons and could even be booted out as an MP all together.