Chief nurse dropped from No 10 briefing 'for not backing Cummings'
England’s chief nurse was dropped from a daily Downing Street
briefing on the coronavirus for refusing to back Dominic Cummings, the Guardian
understands.
In a trial run for the 1 June briefing, Ruth May was asked about
Cummings driving his family from London to Durham while his wife had suspected
Covid-19. When she failed to back the prime minister’s chief adviser, she is
understood to have been dropped from the press conference taking place later
that day – though this has been denied by a government minister.
May’s removal was first reported by the Independent, citing senior
NHS sources, and has been confirmed separately by the Guardian.
The scientific and medical experts who appear at the briefing
alongside a politician were initially reluctant to get involved in the row
surrounding Cummings, who, while in Durham, also made a 60-mile round-trip to a
beauty spot, which he said was to test his eyesight ahead of a longer journey
back to London.
On 28 May, Boris Johnson tried to prevent the chief medical officer
for England, Chris Whitty, and the chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick
Vallance, from answering questions on the subject, before Whitty said that neither
he nor Vallance wished to comment on politics.
However, on 30 May, England’s deputy chief medical officer,
Jonathan Van-Tam, caused embarrassment for the government by saying, in
response to a question about the alleged lockdown breach: “In my opinion the
rules are clear and they have always been clear,” he said. “In my opinion they
are for the benefit of all. In my opinion they apply to all.”
A day later, another deputy chief medical officer for England,
Jenny Harries, replied “Absolutely” when asked whether she agreed with Van-Tam.
She added: “I thought his exposure of wha he felt was exactly right,” she said.
“We usually say exactly the same things because we think in public health
terms, and I think that’s right. From my own perspective, I can assure you that
on a matter of personal and professional integrity, I will always try to follow
the rules, as I know he does.”
The timing of May’s removal suggests that the government was wary
of a senior medical adviser to the government implicitly criticising Cummings
for a third day in a row as it desperately tried to move the news agenda away
from his actions.
Van-Tam has not appeared at a press conference since his comments
on 30 May.
The government’s advisers have generally been on-message at press
conferences and supportive of Downing Street, although there have been
divergences. Whitty and the UK’s other medical officers vetoed the government’s
attempt to lower the coronavirus alert level from four to three. On Wednesday,
Johnson said that it was premature to make judgements about what the government
could have done better in its response to the coronavirus pandemic.
However, Whitty said: “I think there is a long list, actually, of
things that we need to look at very seriously. If I was to choose one, it would
probably be looking at how we could ... speed up testing very early on in the
epidemic. Many of the problems that we have had came because we were unable to
actually work out exactly where we were.”
An NHS spokesperson suggested the Guardian contact the government,
saying: “If someone doesn’t appear, it’s up to Downing Street.” They added that
May was “out there saving lives”.
On Friday, the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, played down
reports, saying: “I don’t think it is true … I am absolutely sure she has been
a regular contributor before and I am sure she will be back here again.”




