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Covid inquiry live: Priti Patel admits policing of Sarah Everard vigil was ‘totally inappropriate’

Ex-home secretary says police generally struck right balance between protest and Covid restrictions

Covid inquiry roundup: Lee Cain and Dominic Cummings provide worrying insight into No 10

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Dame Priti Patel has admitted to the Covid inquiry that the policing of a vigil for murdered marketing executive Sarah Everard was “totally inappropriate”.

The former home secretary said she was “dismayed” by the policing of the vigil in early 2021. The Metropolitan Police have since apologised and paid damages to two of those who were arrested.

However, Dame Priti said she felt the police generally struck the right balance between enforcing coronavirus restrictions and upholding people’s right to protest – despite such matters feeling “uncomfortable” at the time.

Earlier today, former top police chief Martin Hewitt criticised localised Covid rules, the speed at which they changed, and the tier system of different regulations for different areas of the country.

He told the inquiry that localised tiers made it “incredibly difficult for even a perfectly law-abiding and committed citizen to understand precisely what that meant for them in their own personal circumstances”, while having different regulations “on opposite sides of the same road” made policing more difficult.

Jun Pang, the policy and campaigns officer at Liberty, is also giving evidence to the inquiry.

‘Boris Johnson wanted it all and changed his mind often’

Boris Johnson “wanted it all and changed his mind often”, with his decision-making “swinging between extremes”, Helen MacNamara has said, Archie Mitchell reports.

One of Britain’s top civil servants during the pandemic has said the then prime minister was caught between his “undoubted liberal instincts” and “the extremes of shutting everything down”.

“In reality all of the discussion and debate and choices were in the middle,” she told the Covid inquiry.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:46

‘Elastic capacity of NHS meant staff working themselves into the ground,’ inquiry hears

Helen MacNamara said she realised during the pandemic that the “flexible” nature of NHS capacity meant “the capacity of people working in the NHS to work themselves into the ground to keep people alive”, Archie Mitchell reports.

The former top civil servant said officials “kept being told” that NHS capacity was elastic, but soon realised the knock-on impact would devastate the health service.

Ms MacNamara told the Covid probe that “what is happening now” in the NHS - with record waiting lists and industrial strife - is a consequence of “stretching it too far” during the pandemic.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:37

Top officials ignored whether PPE fit women’s bodies for weeks

Helen MacNamara and Downing Street’s deputy chief of staff Cleo Watson had “lots of conversations” about why top officials were not addressing PPE for women, Archie Mitchell reports.

After Ms MacNamara, Britain’s second most senior civil servant at the time, raised the issue with the head of the Cabinet Office’s Covid taskforce, it took two weeks for it to be discussed at a meeting with the prime minister.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:31

MacNamara: ‘Women have died as a result of this'

Helen MacNamara sent a plea to a Cabinet Office colleague saying “women have died” as a result of not enough being done to consider how the pandemic was affecting them, Archie Mitchell reports.

The former top civil servant said issues that stemmed from a sexist culture in Whitehall included weeks of confusion about whether women could access abortion during the lockdown and not making provision for victims of domestic abuse.

“It is very difficult to draw any conclusion other than women have died as a result of this,” she told a colleague in an email seen by the Covid inquiry.

Calling for tangible changes, she said: “It isn’t enough that we keep observing this phenomenon.”

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:18

'Lack of female perspective led to disproportionate focus on shooting and fishing’

The lack of female perspective when key decisions were made led to a disproportionate focus on football, hunting, shooting and fishing, Helen MacNamara has told the Covid inquiry, Archie Mitchell reports.

“There was a serious lack of thinking about domestic abuse and the vulnerable, about carers and informal networks for how people look after each other in families and communities,” the ex-top civil servant said.

Ms MacNamara also said there was a lack of guidance for women who might be pregnant or were pregnant and what those who were key workers should do.

She cited the “absence from the room” of women, and said many key issues affecting women were not even considered.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:15

‘Nobody in centre of government understood NHS,’ MacNamara

Helen MacNamara has told the Covid inquiry she cannot remember anyone working in the centre of government who “understood how the NHS operated, Archie Mitchell reports.

One of Britain’s top civil servants during the pandemic, Ms MacNamara said the Treasury and national security are overrepresented, while the management of the state is underrepresented.

She said it was something she “observed” at the time, but it is now “striking” and speaks to “what needs to be different in the future”.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 14:13

MacNamara: ‘Disappointing’ Johnson didn’t pick up on misogynistic language

It was disappointing that Boris Johnson did not pick up on “violent and misogynistic language” from Dominic Cummings, Helen MacNamara said.

Asked about Mr Cummings’ messages in which he made expletive-laden remarks about her, the former deputy cabinet secretary said: “It is also revealing of exactly the wrong attitude to the civil service. I was doing my job as a civil servant and I am confident about that.

“The way in which it was considered appropriate to describe what should happen to me, yes, as a woman, but, yes, as a civil servant, it is disappointing to me that the prime minister didn’t pick him up on the use of some of that violent and misogynistic language.”

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 13:50

MacNamara: I hav ‘profound regret’ about providing karaoke machine

Helen MacNamara, who provided a karaoke machine for a lockdown-busting leaving-do on June 18, 2020, said she had “profound regret” about the situation.

She said she was worried about the “kind of culture” that staff were working in and the need for them to have space to spend time together.

“My profound regret is for the damage that’s been caused to so many people because of it, as well as just the mortifying experience of seeing what that looks like and how rightly offended everybody is in retrospect,” she said.

“I absolutely knew and thought it was actually important for there to be space for – particularly the private office – to be able to gather together and spend time together.

“That was entirely because of the kind of culture that they were working in and entirely because I was really worried about individuals breaking and suffering, and whether they were going to be okay, and how important their colleagues were to each other.

“I’m saying none of that in excuse of my own misjudgment. I’m saying none of that in excuse of thinking any of these things were okay. But it was a much more complex situation than has allowed to be presented for lots of different reasons.”

She added: “Mainly, I feel very strongly that is unfair on the junior civil servants who were caught up in it.”

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 13:40

Former civil servant says Dominic Cummings texts to ‘handcuff her’ are ‘horrible’

A former senior civil servant has said the Whatsapp messages sent by Dominic Cummings were “horrible”, after he called her a “c***” in an exchange with then-prime minister Boris Johnson.

Helen MacNamara, the former deputy cabinet secretary, said the texts were “both surprising and not surprising”, and that Mr Cummings was “frustrated” with her, while she said she was just “doing my job as a civil servant”.

Holly Evans reports:

Former civil servant says Dominic Cummings texts to ‘handcuff her’ are ‘horrible’

Helen MacNamara said it was ‘disappointing’ that former PM Boris Johnson did not pick up Dominic Cummings on his ‘misogynistic language’

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 13:20

Session paused for lunch

The inquiry is taking a break for lunch, resuming at 1.45pm to continue hearing evidence from Ms MacNamara.

In the meantime, we’ll post some highlights from her evidence this morning as well as anything we might have missed.

Live updates will resume after lunch.

Matt Mathers1 November 2023 13:09

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