The British government yesterday rejected calls to sack top adviser Dominic Cummings over allegations he broke coronavirus lockdown rules by travelling across the country while displaying symptoms of the disease.
Cummings left his London home shortly after he was diagnosed with the virus on March 30, and was later seen with his young son close to his parents’ home in Durham, more than 400km away in northeastern England. Under lockdown rules brought in on March 23, anyone with symptoms must self-isolate in their own homes.
And people aged over 70 — as Cummings’ parents are — are not allowed to receive visitors.
Britain’s opposition Labour party said his actions suggested Cummings viewed himself as above the law and the smaller Liberal Democrats said it could be a resignation issue.
“The public have made extraordinary sacrifices during this pandemic and the lockdown. It cannot be one rule for those who set them and another for the British people,” Labour leader Keir Starmer said.
An unnamed minister told the Daily Telegraph: “He’s going to have to go. It’s just arrogance.”
But a spokesman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that Cummings had acted “in line with coronavirus guidelines.”
“Owing to his wife being infected with suspected coronavirus and the high likelihood that he would himself become unwell, it was essential for Dominic Cummings to ensure his young child could be properly cared for,” the spokesman said yesterday.
“His sister and nieces had volunteered to help so he went to a house near to but separate from his extended family in case their help was needed,” he added.
On March 24, deputy chief medical officer Jenny Harries had said that “although we are encouraging everybody to stay in their own households... clearly if you have adults who are unable to look after a small child, that is an exceptional circumstance.”
Cummings also denied reports in the Guardian newspaper that police had spoken directly to him or his family over the issue.
Nevertheless, police in Durham had confirmed on Friday that they received a tip-off on March 31 about someone who had travelled to the city from London and they repeated their statement yesterday.
“Officers made contact with the owners of that address who confirmed that the individual in question was present and was self-isolating in part of the house,” the police said.
Labour said that the government’s response “raises more questions than it answers”, particularly over whether “Number 10 is now questioning the validity of the statement from police.”
Government colleagues came to Cummings’ defence, with foreign minister Dominic Raab tweeting that “two parents with coronavirus, were anxiously taking care of their young child.
“Those now seeking to politicise it should take a long hard look in the mirror,” he added.
The adviser has been a highly divisive figure in British politics ever since masterminding the successful 2016 Brexit campaign alongside Johnson.
When Johnson was elected prime minister last year, he brought in Cummings as his top adviser.
Downing Street revealed at the end of March that Cummings was self-isolating with virus symptoms.
Johnson was also infected and ended up in intensive care.
Ed Davey, acting leader of the Liberal Democrats, said that if Cummings had broken the rules, “he will have to resign”. 
Earlier this month, leading epidemiologist Neil Ferguson quit a government panel on coronavirus after admitting breaking the lockdown rules by meeting his mistress.
Cummings, meanwhile, was filmed leaving his home yesterday, telling a throng of reporters that it was “a question of doing the right thing, it’s not about what you guys think,” while rebuking the press pack for not obeying social distancing rules.
Reuters adds: “I behaved reasonably and legally,” Cummings told reporters outside his house after telling them to stay 2m apart in accordance with government guidelines.
When a reporter said it did not look good, he said: “Who cares about good looks — it’s a question of doing the right thing it’s not about what you guys think.”
Johnson’s most senior ministers, including Michael Gove, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab and Health Secretary Matt Hancock, defended Cummings.
The Scottish National Party and the Liberal Democrats calls for Cummings to be sacked.
Scotland’s chief medical officer, Catherine Calderwood, stepped down after she was caught making two trips to her second home.
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