david63 wrote: 23 May 2020, 11:05
Irrespective of it being politically motivated he must go. He is a high profile figure who totally broke the rules and he is not above the law rules.
I agree with your take on this. However, he won't resign, and Johnson won't sack him, as Cummings tells Johnson what to do.
Our instructions were perfectly clear, If a person is symptomatic or a member of the household is symptomatic, they should not leave the house for any reason. No ifs or buts, they shouldn't leave the house at all.
If Cummings and his wife were really that ill and couldn't have looked after their child, did they really have nobody in London who could have taken the child? (clue, his wife has a brother that lives in London). Did they really have to drive 270 miles to Durham to find someone? If they were really that ill, how did they manage to drive that distance anyway? Plus they had a 4year old child with them, so they almost certainly stopped at services to go to the loo etc, and maybe buy petrol. Who knows who could have been infected due to their actions.
It should be noted that his wife, Mary Wakefield, wrote in the Spectator about their illness. It would appear she was never incapacitated to the extent that she couldn't look after their son.
https://spectator.us/getting-coronaviru ... ssion=true
This flagrant flouting of the instructions that apply to all of us should make his position untenable. But these are not normal times.
If the above wasn't bad enough, the likes of Gove, Sunak, Raab and Hancock have been wheeled on to Twitter to support Cummings. All with the same theme - its all fine, because it was about 'childcare'. To my mind this has made it worse - By backing him up, they are undermining the rules that they themselves have put in place, and are sticking two fingers up at all those people who've followed the rules to the letter.
Of course, silence from Johnson, but as he's mostly invisible, no surprise there.