Boris Johnson has refused to apologise for his handling of the Westminster sleaze row amid continued frustration and anger among Conservative MPs.
The British prime minister reportedly admitted he “crashed the car into a ditch” in the row over standards at Westminster in the wake of the Owen Paterson row.
Deputy prime minister Dominic Raab insisted the UK government is committed to “fixing the problem” but Chris Bryant, the chair of the cross-party committee tasked with detailing the plans to tackle MPs’ second jobs, said the prime minister’s proposals had “not really been thought through very properly”.
At a private meeting of the Conservative backbench 1922 Committee on Wednesday, Mr Johnson took responsibility for the UK government’s botched attempt to get Owen Paterson off the hook after he was found to have broken the rules on paid lobbying.
“On a clear day, I crashed the car into a ditch. I will get the car out of the ditch,” Mr Johnson reportedly told the gathering, although on Thursday he appeared to distance himself from the comments.
On ITV News, it was put to Mr Johnson that “you have told colleagues you crashed the car, you’ve even said you had regrets”.
But Mr Johnson said: “I don’t think I actually used those words.”
Pressed five times on whether he would say “sorry”, Mr Johnson said: “I’ve said what I have to say”.
Mr Raab acknowledged the UK government has a job of work to do to restore morale within the Conservative ranks after seeing the party engulfed by allegations of Tory “sleaze”.
Asked on Sky News about discontent within the party, he said there is always “one or other disgruntled individual” who is prepared to complain anonymously in the media.
Pressed on whether that means there is no general unrest, Mr Raab added: “Not sure I’d put it in that idyllic way. There’s always debate amongst MPs, but the most important thing is we’re fixing the problem.”
On Wednesday, the Commons backed Mr Johnson’s proposals to ban MPs from taking paid political consultancies and to limit the time they can spend doing second jobs.
However, only 297 MPs, fewer than half the total, voted for the motion, with opposition parties abstaining.
Four Tory MPs even voted for a rival Labour motion which would have imposed a clear parliamentary timetable for implementing reform.
Mr Raab said the Committee on Standards had been asked to deliver the details of the reforms in January and said MPs’ outside work could either be limited by time or amount earned.
But Mr Bryant, the committee’s chair, said he was worried the UK government was trying “to bounce everybody into a set of proposals which have not really been thought through very properly”.
Downing Street said that Mr Johnson hoped that there could still be an agreement to take forward the proposals on a cross-party basis.
But the Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, told the PA news agency: “At the moment we are in a situation where he (Mr Johnson) ripped the rules up, he’s now desperately trying to back-pedal.
“We are always up for a conversation about how standards can be improved.
“We put a very strong plan of action before the House of Commons yesterday, that would take place immediately, particularly in relation to second jobs, and the Prime Minister whipped his MPs to vote it down.
“He pretends he’s had a conversion to standards for the first time in his life – that lasted about 24 hours until he then whipped his MPs to vote down a plan that would actually make a significant change.
“What we’ve now got is a weak proposal to have some further discussions. Discussions have been going on forever about standards – we don’t need more discussion, we need some action.”
Meanwhile, Labour stepped up pressure on Mr Johnson to declare further details of what his free holiday in Spain in a villa owned by the family of minister Lord Goldsmith cost.
The British prime minister declared the use of a VIP lounge at Heathrow, donated by the airport, worth the equivalent of £1,800, but has not published details of how much the villa would have cost.
“I always declare everything in the normal way,” Mr Johnson said.
Former UK cabinet minister Robert Jenrick said the prime minister had been poorly advised when it came to reforming the standards system.
He told ITV’s Peston: “It has been a very difficult two weeks and almost everyone involved would agree that it’s been handled poorly by the Government and it’s damaged the Government to an extent, and it’s damaged Parliament as well.”
Mr Johnson’s appearance before the 1922 Committee was the culmination of weeks of pressure following the fiasco over the attempt to save Mr Paterson from suspension.
Former Cabinet minister Mr Paterson had been found to have breached lobbying rules by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards but a government-backed amendment attempted to save him from suspension and overhaul the whole standards process.
The UK government U-turned on the idea after a backlash and Mr Paterson resigned as an MP, but the saga kicked off a deep dive into standards in public life, with a focus on second jobs.