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Church of England leaders say PM’s defence of aide was ‘risible’ and ‘lacked integrity’

John Inge, the bishop of Worcester (File photo)

Church of England bishops have expressed unusually strong criticism of Boris Johnson over his defense of actions taken by his chief aide, Dominic Cummings.

More than a dozen bishops questioned the integrity of the prime minister following his press conference on Sunday, in which he refused to acknowledge that Cummings had breached lockdown rules when he traveled with his infected wife and their child to Durham.

The bishops said Johnson’s defense was “risible”, that he had “no respect for the people”, “lacked integrity”, and risked undermining the trust of the public. Pete Broadbent, the bishop of Willesden, tweeted, “Johnson has now gone the full Trump.”

The first bishop to go public in criticizing the prime minister was Nick Baines, the bishop of Leeds, who told the Observer, “People across the country have sacrificed hugely in order to obey both the spirit and word of government advice. People have missed being with family members who have died. But, now we learn that there is one rule for the people and another for No 10 and the elite.”

After Johnson’s comments on Sunday, Baines tweeted, “The question now is: do we accept being lied to, patronized and treated by a PM as mugs? The moral question is not for Cummings – it is for PM and ministers/MPs who find this behavior acceptable. What are we to teach our children? (I ask as a responsible father.)”

John Inge, the bishop of Worcester, said, “The PM’s risible defense of Cummings is an insult to all those who have made such sacrifices to ensure the safety of others.”

Vivienne Faull, the bishop of Bristol, tweeted, “Day 61 #livingdifferently in a nation where the PM has no respect for the people. The bonds of peace and our common life (which had been wonderfully strengthened during the testing by CV-19) have been dangerously undermined this evening.”

The bishop of Ripon, Helen-Ann Hartley, said, “Integrity, trust and leadership were never there; just a driven misguided ideology of power that has total disregard for the most weak and vulnerable, and those who work to protect and care for us with relatively low pay.

“My parents live in Durham, an hour away from where we live. My father finished radiotherapy treatment just before lockdown. I’ve missed his birthday, Mothering Sunday and countless other catch-ups that would have happened. And that’s a fraction of a story compared with others.”

Paul Bayes, the bishop of Liverpool, pointed out that millions of people had followed government advice, “stayed at home, coping with difficulty, did the right thing and still do. Vulnerable people are alive today because of the self-discipline of so many. I thank God for their integrity … It is not good enough to treat the people of this country like sheep who can be fooled.”

The bishop of Newcastle, Christine Hardman, said, “I am deeply troubled tonight by the prime minister’s briefing. We can forgive mistakes and poor judgment and can understand and admire loyalty but forgiveness and understanding need openness and we did not see this tonight.”

Pete Wilcox, the bishop of Sheffield, said, “I don’t usually tweet politics, and I have carefully steered clear during the pandemic. But tonight I must say, the PM & his cabinet are undermining the trust of the electorate and the risks to life are real.

The bishop of Reading, Olivia Graham, said she was “deeply worried by the PM’s judgment call on this one. Not from a political perspective but a moral one. His response lacks both integrity and respect and he has just made his task of leading us through this crisis much, much harder.”

Emma Ineson, the bishop of Penrith, commented, “Goodness, Dominic Cummings must be really, really valuable to Johnson to be worth what he’s just risked by backing him ie the trust of the British people.

(Source: The Guardian)


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