Boris Johnson’s former chief adviser reignited a campaign of criticism of the government, publishing a text message exchange in which the British leader branded his health minister’s coronavirus testing drive as “hopeless”.
Reuters could not independently verify whether the exchange was genuine.
Prime Minister Johnson’s Downing Street office said it would not engage with every allegation made by Dominic Cummings, who left the office late last year.
In a blog post, Mr Cummings intensified his criticism of Mr Johnson and health minister Matt Hancock over their handling of the pandemic, less than a month after accusing the government of being responsible for thousands of avoidable COVID-19 deaths.
Despite questioning Mr Johnson’s fitness for his role as prime minister and castigating the government’s fight against COVID-19, Mr Cummings’ criticism has yet to seriously puncture the British leader’s ratings in opinion polls.
In his posting on Wednesday, Mr Cummings posted screenshots of the conversations, which he said were with the prime minister, in which Mr Johnson responded to Mr Cummings’ complaints about the slow progress of Mr Hancock’s efforts with the words “totally f***ing hopeless".
Mr Cummings said people should ask Mr Johnson why he had kept Mr Hancock in his position if he thought so little of him.
Mr Johnson’s spokesman said he had not asked the prime minister directly about the new allegations, and declined to comment on the authenticity of the exchange.
“I don’t plan to engage with every allegation made. The prime minister has set out that we will hold a public inquiry next year, the health secretary has given hours of evidence to the parliamentary committee and I have taken a number of questions on this issue previously,” he told reporters.
“Our focus is on recovering from the pandemic, moving through the road map, distributing vaccines and delivering on the public’s priorities.”
'Crackers'
The deputy leader of the main opposition Labour Party, Angela Rayner, said the “questions raised today go to the heart of the prime minister’s direct and personal responsibility for the UK’s shocking death toll”.
In seven hours of questioning by a parliamentary committee last month, Mr Cummings had said it was “crackers” that Mr Johnson was prime minister and aired particular disdain for Mr Hancock, accusing him of repeatedly lying in government meetings.
Mr Hancock rejected the allegations and some in the Conservative Party say that Mr Cummings has an axe to grind after being forced from his post.
But in his latest blog, Mr Cummings goes into how he remembers day-to-day decisions and underlines his criticism of the prime minister, who he accused of taking things offline “as soon as things get ‘a bit embarrassing’ ... before shouting ‘forward to victory’, doing a thumbs-up and pegging it out of the room”.
He again said Mr Johnson wanted to leave office, saying he “had a clear plan to leave at the latest a couple of years after the next election”.
Mr Johnson’s spokesman quoted the prime minister’s words when similar allegations were raised, calling them “utter nonsense”.