Boris Johnson Hits Back At Watchdog In £350m NHS Pledge Row

Boris Johnson Hits Back At Watchdog In £350m NHS Pledge Row

Boris Johnson has accused the head of the statistics watchdog of a “complete misrepresentation” of his claims about Brexit and called on him to withdraw the criticism.

The Foreign Secretary has written to Sir David Norgrove to say he is “surprised and disappointed” by the letter he received.

Mr Johnson claimed the UK Statistics Authority chief had privately conceded he was “more concerned” by the headlines in the coverage of the 4,000-word Brexit blueprint and “accepted that I was not responsible for those”.

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(PA graphic)

Sir David had written to Mr Johnson to say he was “surprised and disappointed” the widely discredited referendum pledge that up to £350 million a week extra could be spent on the NHS after Brexit had been revisited and said it was a “clear misuse” of official figures.

He stood by the criticism when the Foreign Secretary’s aides later claimed he was “absolutely fine” with the piece.

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The letter sent by Sir David Norgrove to Boris Johnson

In a highly unusual move, Mr Johnson has now responded to Sir David, criticising his approach.

He wrote: “I must say that I was surprised and disappointed by your letter of today, since it was based on what appeared to be a wilful distortion of the text of my article.

“When we spoke you conceded that you were more concerned by the headline and the BBC coverage, though you accepted that I was not responsible for those. I suggest if the BBC coverage offends you that you write to the BBC.

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Sir David Norgrove (Jonathan Brady/PA)

“You say that I claim that there would be £350 million that ‘might be available for extra public spending’ when we leave the EU.

“This is a complete misrepresentation of what I said and I would like you to withdraw it. I in fact said: ‘once we have settled our accounts we will take back control of roughly £350m per week. It would be a fine thing, as many of us have pointed out, if a lot of that money went on the NHS’.

“That is very different from claiming that there would be an extra £350m available for public spending and I am amazed that you should impute such a statement to me.”