Covid Inquiry: Biggest revelations from Dominic Cummings, Lee Cain, Helen MacNamara and other key players

From Number 10's 'macho overconfidence' to half-term holidays - the key takeaways
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A busy week at the Covid Inquiry has seen appearances from some of the key figures in Downing Street during the early stages of the pandemic.

Here’s what we learned from the appearance of Helen MacNamaraDominic Cummings, Lee Cain and others from Monday to Wednesday.

Downing Street and governmental dysfunction

The inquiry heard multiple references to Mr Johnson as “the trolley” who tended to “wild oscillations”, while former No 10’s communications director Mr Cain admitted that his former boss’s erratic decision-making was “rather exhausting”.

Ms MacNamara, the former deputy cabinet secretary, described an air of “macho overconfidence” under Mr Johnson in the early weeks of the crisis. She summarised his view as being that Britain would be fine and had nothing to learn from the Italians, even as the scale of the crisis was becoming alarmingly clear in hospitals there.

She also eviscerated then health secretary Matt Hancock's assurances to No10 that he had an early grip on the pandemic. The lack of detail in an action plan presented by Mr Hancock at the start of March 2020 was "shocking", she told the inquiry, echoing in milder language the expletive-laden attacks launched on the former minister by Mr Cummings.

Based on the lack of planning, Ms MacNamara recalled the "horrible" moment she realised the country was heading for "total disaster".

In WhatsApp messages shared with the inquiry, the UK’s top civil servant Simon Case said that Mr Johnson “cannot lead” and was making government “impossible”.

It was not just the Prime Minister who came in for criticism, but the Cabinet Office and wider system.

Mr Cummings made clear his views about the how the “dysfunctional system” during a “meltdown of the British state” failed to deal with the crisis.

Former top aide Martin Reynolds pointed to a “systemic failure” to prepare for the pandemic and acknowledged that the realisation of the scale of the disaster had come “late”.

BRITAIN-HEALTH-VIRUS-INQUIRY
Helen MacNamara giving evidence on Wednesday
UK Covid-19 Inquiry/AFP via Gett

Half-term holidays

It emerged during proceedings there was a 10-day period – coinciding with half-term holidays – in which no notes on coronavirus were sent to Mr Johnson nor emergency Cobra meetings held.

The period raises key questions about government preparedness and how seriously it was taking the impending crisis, only weeks out from a lockdown being imposed.

Mr Cummings acknowledged it was “pretty insane” that Mr Johnson and other senior government figures were on holiday during the period.

Dominic Cummings’ clashes

The man described as “the most empowered chief off staff Downing Street has ever seen” apologised for his use of vulgar language when he appeared before Lady Hallett.

“Useless f***pigs, morons, c****,” were among the words he used on WhatsApp during his time in Government fighting the pandemic.

He also took aim at Matt Hancock, with WhatsApp messages revealing his push for Mr Johnson to reshuffle the then-health secretary. In one exchange, Mr Cummings claimed Mr Hancock had “lied his way through this and killed people and dozens and dozens of people have seen it”.

Matt Hancock ‘killed people’ and needed to be sacked, Dominic Cummings told the Prime Minister during the pandemic (Aaron Chown/PA)
PA Archive

Questions of misogyny

Mr Cummings denied he had behaved misogynistically, as the hearing heard expletive-laden WhatsApp messages about Ms MacNamara.

The top adviser called her “that c***” and said he would “handcuff her and escort her” from Downing Street.

Questions about the atmosphere inside Downing Street emerged on Monday, when among the evidence published by the inquiry was an internal report into the culture at the top of Government.

Co-written by Ms MacNamara, it said: “Lots of people mentioned junior women being talked over or ignored.”

It also complained about a “superhero bunfight”.

In her own evidence on Wednesday, Ms MacNamara said the messages from Mr Cummings were “horrible to read”, but that she was not surprised by them given the “toxic culture” that prevailed in Mr Johnson's Downing Street.

Questions over Eat Out to Help Out

Rishi Sunak’s Eat Out to Help Out scheme also came in for criticism.

Mr Cain said that the then-chancellor’s plan and the policy of sending people back to work during the pandemic “made absolutely no sense whatsoever”.

Former private secretary Imran Shafi also confirmed to the inquiry that Sir Chris Whitty had referred to the scheme as “Eat out to help out the virus”.

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