The Inquiry photograph

The Inquiry

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Initial release Spain
Directors Giulio Base
Budget8 million EUR (estimated)
Composers Andrea Morricone
Story by Ennio Flaiano
Suso Cecchi d'Amico
Valerio Massimo Manfredi
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2320678
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About The Inquiry


Roman Emperor Tiberius learns that a new kingdom is set to rise in the East following the crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth. He sends his general Titus Valerius Taurus to investigate the matter.

Infected blood: Tory rebellion expected on payouts amendment

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... The Inquiry heard that one person dies as a result of contaminated blood products every four days...

Boris Johnson to apologise to Covid Inquiry but say he got big calls right

Boris Johnson to apologise to Covid Inquiry but say he got big calls right
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... His evidence will follow weeks of heavy criticism of him at The Inquiry...

Covid inquiry: Some local leaders put politics ahead of public health, says Hancock

Covid inquiry: Some local leaders put politics ahead of public health, says Hancock
Dec 1,2023 9:21 am

... More on Covid and the Covid InquiryOn his second day of evidence to The Inquiry, he was questioned on government decisions as Covid cases began rising in autumn 2020...

Covid inquiry: Toxic culture damaged response, says Matt Hancock

Covid inquiry: Toxic culture damaged response, says Matt Hancock
Nov 30,2023 12:41 pm

... During The Inquiry, Mr Hancock has been accused of being untruthful...

Dominic Raab denies Dominic Cummings made key pandemic decisions

Dominic Raab denies Dominic Cummings made key pandemic decisions
Nov 29,2023 1:01 pm

... Mr Raab, who was then also foreign secretary and later served as deputy prime minister, told The Inquiry: " There is a whole circus that can be built up in the media and elsewhere around the internal battles between individuals, and some of that is natural and healthy...

Covid inquiry: Michael Gove defends Boris Johnson over lockdown decision-making

Covid inquiry: Michael Gove defends Boris Johnson over lockdown decision-making
Nov 28,2023 1:11 pm

... Mr Gove was the first senior cabinet minister at the centre of the UK government s response to the pandemic to give evidence in this part of The Inquiry...

Excluding us from meetings harmed Covid response, mayors tell inquiry

Excluding us from meetings harmed Covid response, mayors tell inquiry
Nov 27,2023 1:01 pm

... The Inquiry heard that his earlier requests to attend were rejected by No 10 on the grounds that other regional mayors would then need to be invited...

What is behind Alex Salmond's new legal fight with the Scottish government?

What is behind Alex Salmond's new legal fight with the Scottish government?
Nov 24,2023 1:31 pm

... The Inquiry saw people like Mr Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon give hours of evidence, and laid bare the problems in the government s attempts to defend the judicial review after legal advice was published...

Boris Johnson grilling: Our correspondents on how it went

Nov 22,2023 1:41 pm

Boris Johnson , The UK's former Prime Minister , has faced a grilling from a committee or MPs on whether he intentionally misled Parliament over lockdown parties.

Our political correspondent Ione Wells had a ringside seat in The Committee room, and political editor Chris Mason was on The Edge of his seat all afternoon.

From handwritten notes to wry smiles and tense exchanges, here's what They made of it.

Boris Johnson is always someone who has used - or attempted to use - humour in his speeches, even when he is trying to Get Out of The stickiest of situations.

He defends his view that his attendance at gatherings was in The Rules , saying that during The Birthday gathering for Him - which The Police gave Him a fine for - The cake was put in a Tupperware box and later eaten by his private secretaries.

The Comment gets a few wry smiles in The Room from spectators. But he's clearly trying to keep his tone more serious than usual, given what's At Stake for his political career.

As The Questions come thick and fast, Mr Johnson is being pretty defiant.

He's arguing that a leaving do he was photographed at - which shows a lack of social distancing - " had to happen" and was " necessary" because two senior members of staff had left in acrimonious circumstances and he needed to give reassurance, and it was " essential" for work purposes.

He seems to be hammering this point about " necessity" As One of his key Defences - The question will be whether that washes with The Committee , who will be aware other key workers who still had to go to physical workplaces did not consider in-person leaving dos " necessary".

Remember though, The Committee is not reopening The Inquiry into whether these events were in The Rules or not. They 're trying to Work Out if he should have known They were not - and told Parliament as much.

Through The Course of The afternoon, Mr Johnson is Getting More rattled by suggestions he has misrepresented his own social distancing rules.

He talked about No 10 maintaining social distancing " wherever possible" despite photographs showing people standing close together.

He appeared The tensest yet when They quoted back to Him his " hands, face, space" mantra from The Time , and reminded Him that The Rules at The Time required people to stay 2m Apart - or 1m with mitigations.

The tricky thing for Him here is there's nothing from The Photograph to suggest mitigations were in place at that photographed leaving do.

And Mr Johnson needs to Be Careful what he says - Remember he's sworn an oath to tell The Truth , meaning if he doesn't, he could be accused of perjury - a criminal offence.

When asked whether He Said , at one gathering, it was The " most unsocially distanced event" in The UK, he couldn't deny He Said it.

Instead, he just said he didn't Remember saying those words, and thinks it's unlikely he would have said them.

From where I'm sitting - directly behind Mr Johnson, it's quite fascinating watching this all play out.

His legal adviser is periodically handing Him some notes and pointing to sections of his written submission to The Committee outlining his defence, which was published on Tuesday.

Mr Johnson has got a big stack of A4 sheets of paper with Him too - Many covered in handwritten scribbled notes.

When The Committee put to Him that attendees at his birthday gathering in The Cabinet room included his wife and his interior designer, Mr Johnson was quick to try to correct them - Calling Lulu Lytle a " contractor who was working in The building".

He is keen to use language that grounds all these gatherings in a " work" - not social - setting.

This birthday gathering did take place before a meeting. But he's been challenged on why people like Carrie Johnson and Lulu Lytle needed to be there, given They weren't going to attend The Meeting afterwards.

Johnson's defence here relies on No 10 being unusual because The Prime Minister lives and works in The same building. He repeated his prior defence that it wasn't obvious to Him rules were broken because The Celebration was briefed to The Times newspaper at The Time .

We knew Mr Johnson was going to hammer The Point that it wouldn't have been " obvious" to Him that events were against The Rules .

But what's a little more surprising is how strongly he is disputing The idea that these gatherings were " not essential".

The Committee are keeping pretty straight-faced, but I've detected a few raised eyebrows at these comments.

Mr Johnson seems more confident arguing that he might not have realised it was against The Rules . He seems on shakier ground trying to convince The MPs that these events were absolutely essential for work.

What we're Seeing - both with The Images that Boris Johnson is being shown where he has to look himself in The Eye , looking at either those contributions in The House of Commons or those still Images - is The Interrogation .

How does his argument actually match up to The reality of what he was saying at The Time ?

We know his pushback As Far as these gatherings and leaving dos were concerned, that he regarded them as necessary in terms of retaining The morale of his team in The Height of a pandemic.

But clearly As Is Happening - and we saw it in his testimony and The questioning from Sir Bernard Jenkin - They 're able to say to Him , 'well hang on a minute, look at what The Rules were at The Time , look at what The guidance was then and to what extent were They in keeping'.

On a personal level he can say there was only that one occasion he was fined by The Metropolitan Police .

In The Others , therefore, he can say his behaviour wasn't unlawful at The Time he was at those parties even if The People at those gatherings ended up being fined for whatever went on after he had went.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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