Rishi Sunak's pricey COVID Inquiry authorized problem was doomed to failure - and has now been kicked into contact

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It was a authorized problem that absolutely was all the time doomed to failure.

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And COVID bereaved households and opposition MPs are proper to say that it was a waste of money and time and seemed like a cover-up.

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The authorities's declare that Baroness Hallett had no energy to demand "unambiguously irrelevant" materials for the COVID-19 public inquiry was at greatest flimsy, at worst disingenuous.

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Individuals, junior officers, present and former ministers and departments should not be required to offer materials irrelevant to the inquiry's work, the Cabinet Office bleated.

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"People working for government have a right to a private life," it was claimed, in a very crass assertion when the judicial assessment was launched on the finish of May.

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Boris Johnson, no stranger to accusations of cover-ups, had no drawback handing over his WhatsApps and notebooks.

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Politics newest:Bereaved families criticise 'desperate waste of time and money' as government loses court bid

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And certainly, in a letter to Baroness Hallett on 2 June, he stated he was sending all the pieces he needed to the inquiry anyway and bypassing the Cabinet Office.

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The suspicion on the time was that it was the present prime minister, Rishi Sunak, not the previous PM who had one thing to cover from the inquiry.

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After all, he was chancellor of the exchequer in the course of the pandemic.

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Kicked into contact

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And fairly rightly - and never surprisingly - the judges within the King's Bench Division of the High Court, vice-president Lord Justice Dingemanns and Mr Justice Garnham, have thrown out the Cabinet Office's software.

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James Dingemanns, as he was then, was a distinguished rugby participant in his youth and was a authorized adviser on the 2015 and 2019 rugby world cups.

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Now the rugby fanatic decide has firmly kicked the federal government's try at a COVID cover-up into contact.

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At the identical time as dismissing the Cabinet Office's problem, nonetheless, the judges have additionally utilized some widespread sense and advised the 2 sides to get collectively and work out what's related to the COVID Inquiry and what's not.

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Surely that should not be too tough. And it additionally is smart to keep away from a pricey and time-consuming enchantment by the federal government, probably going all the way in which to the Supreme Court.

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After dismissing the federal government's declare for judicial assessment, the judges sensibly steered that the Cabinet Office ought to enchantment to Baroness Hallett about what's related and let her resolve.

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Surely this was the method the federal government ought to have taken within the first place fairly than dashing off to courtroom? That would have saved money and time and prevented accusations of a cover-up.

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Sensibly the federal government has now backed down, declaring: "We can work together to have an arrangement that respects the privacy of individuals and ensures completely irrelevant information is returned and not retained."

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What a pity the Cabinet Office did not take that pragmatic and non-confrontational method within the first place.

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By going to courtroom, the federal government antagonised the bereaved households, who not surprisingly have condemned the authorized struggle as "a desperate waste of time and money".

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Read extra:Austerity measures hit public health services, Professor Dame Jenny Harries saysMatt Hancock says UK approach to pandemic planning was 'completely wrong'

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The Liberal Democrats have accused Mr Sunak of "trying to dodge scrutiny and hide the truth" and Labour's Angela Rayner says the PM is making an attempt to undermine the COVID Inquiry.

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The cost in opposition to Mr Sunak - of making an attempt to dodge scrutiny - has been made already this week, on the Liaison Committee on Tuesday by Labour MP Sir Chris Bryant, who chairs the Standards Committee within the Commons.

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Sir Chris cited the PM's dodging Commons votes on privileges stories on Owen Paterson and Mr Johnson, failing to announce the federal government's NHS workforce plan in parliament and lacking PMQs this week and subsequent week.

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On high of those criticisms, the suspicion that Mr Sunak is just not being totally straight and trustworthy with the COVID Inquiry and attempting to withhold info from it might be very damaging for him.

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And no matter his intentions, he may have prevented a lot of the criticism - and saved time and taxpayers' cash - by not embarking on a pricey authorized problem that he was all the time prone to lose.

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