'Stay elite': what the papers say about Dominic Cummings' refusal to quit
Any hopes in Downing Street that Dominic Cummings’
TV appearance would draw a line under his Durham trip have been dashed if
today’s front pages are anything to go by.
“No regrets” features prominently on several, with
the Daily Mail and the Daily Mirror using the same phrases, but in reverse
order. “No apology, no regrets” says the Mail, about Cummings’ “rose garden
roasting”, referring to his TV appearance in No 10’s garden. “Boris’s defiant
svengali refuses to quit” the Mail says over his trip to Durham, and asks: “So
how CAN he survive?”
“‘I don’t regret what I did’: Cummings
refuses to quit,” is the Guardian’s headline, describing his TV appearance as
“extraordinary”. His justification for driving to Durham to self-isolate was so
complex, writes the Guardian’s political editor, Heather Stewart, “it might
have helped if he had had a whiteboard to sketch it out on”.
The Mirror, whose joint investigation with the
Guardian broke the story, has “No regrets, no apology” as its main headline,
describing Cummings as “shameless”. The paper lists nine “killer questions” it
wants him to answer after his press conference – including why he returned to
No 10 when he suspected his wife had Covid-19, contrary to official advice.
The Times splashes with “Cummings: I did not break
lockdown rules”, adding he believed he behaved “reasonably and legally”. The
paper acknowledges Cummings’ account “raised several questions about his
behaviour that he did not address”.
It says Downing Street has tried to “orchestrate a
show of support” for the PM’s aide, but some senior ministers are angry: “My
jaw continues to drop. He’s saying he’s so much more important than us plebs,”
it anonymously quotes one as saying.
The Telegraph runs a large picture of Cummings, but
a very small headline: “I don’t regret what I did”. It saves its splash for
“High street to reopen as UK edges back to normality”. It quotes from Cummings’
interview: “I believe I made the right judgment but I can understand that
others may disagree with that,” adding that he knew British people “hate the
idea of unfairness”.
The Sun also reserves its main story for “Open for
business’”, and allots Cummings the top right hand corner with the headline:
“Cummings out fighting: I did what was right for my family and my country”.
The Express also leads on the hope of businesses
reopening (“Hurrah! Shops to open doors soon”), with a single headline for
Cummings: “I’ve no regrets: Cummings faces down his critics”.
The FT carries a picture of Cummings, but its
headline is about the PM: “In the open: Johnson sorry for public’s anger after
Cummings defends trips”.
Metro considers the inequity of it all and riffs off
Boris Johnson’s “stay alert” messaging with the headline: “Stay elite”.




