- Title: Brits think it’s time for health minister to go following reports of affair
- Date: 25th June 2021
- Summary: SUB-HEADLINE READING (English): "IT'S AMAZING HE WAS SO BRAZEN ABOUT IT AS HE IS SECRETARY OF STATE" SUB-HEADLINE READING (English): "IT'S SHOCKING HE WAS HAVING AFFAIR WITH AIDE HE WAS USED PUBLIC MONEY TO HIRE" (SOUNDBITE) (English) IRISH RESIDENT OF UK, MARY O'SHEA, SAYING: "It's not our job to sort of like condone or not. Did the affair happen during working hours or after hours? I think that needs to be considered. Who's hurt and who's not hurt is their business because there is more sides than one to any story. Whether it's taxpayers money, I think if it's an after-hours thing, I don't think it's got anything to do with it. It's like if he's playing golf on the weekend, is that sort of using taxpayers money? So I do think you need to look at all the facts. If he's nipping off for the afternoon when he's meant to be sorting out the vaccines, I'd have a problem with that." (SOUNDBITE) (English) ESSEX RESIDENT, TERRY BROWN, SAYING: "I've just called him Tony Hancock. That wasn't a mistake; that was deliberate. Tony Hancock was a very funny comedian, probably before your time. As comedians go, he (Matt Hancock) takes the biscuit. So I would like to see him out of the job as of now, regardless of that."
- Embargoed: 9th July 2021 16:10
- Keywords: Britain COVID-19 Gina Coladangelo Matt Hancock UK adviser affair aide coronavirus health minister health secretary kiss
- Location: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- City: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Europe,Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA002EIWHK5J
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: British Health Secretary Matt Hancock apologised on Friday (June 25) for breaching social distancing guidelines after pictures appeared of him embracing his top aide and the prime minister said he believed the matter was now closed.
Photographs published on the front page of the Sun showed Hancock kissing the woman - a friend hired for a taxpayer-funded role - in his office.
"I accept that I breached the social distancing guidance in these circumstances," Hancock said.
A spokesperson for Boris Johnson said the prime minister had accepted Hancock's apology and had full confidence in him.
The opposition Labour Party has called on Johnson to sack Hancock.
A number of British residents told Reuters they agreed with that assessment, but for a range of reasons.
For Irish national Mary O'Shea, she thought Hancock should be allowed his privacy unless the relationship interfered with his job as the figurehead of Britain's fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.
Meanwhile, Essex resident Terry Brown likened Hancock to famed 1950s comedian and namesake Tony Hancock, saying he hoped to see the minister out of office soon irrespective of the latest reports.
Hancock, 42, has often appeared on television to tell the public to follow strict rules and to defend his department against criticism of its response to the crisis.
The photographs raised more questions about Hancock's judgement, both in appointing a friend to a taxpayer-funded role and in breaking guidance imposed on millions of people by Johnson's government.
Under fire for his handling of the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, Hancock was found in February to have acted unlawfully by not revealing details of contracts signed during the health crisis.
Hancock also said last year that it was right that a government scientist resigned after he broke COVID rules by meeting a partner.
The Rupert Murdoch-owned Sun tabloid said the pictures of Hancock, who is married, and the aide were taken in his department last month.
The popular daily newspaper did not say how it obtained the security camera images, but it cited a whistleblower as commenting on the relationship.
The Sun said Hancock met the aide at Oxford University in the early 2000s.
She is listed on the health department's website as a non-executive director.
Hancock has been criticised for his department's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, particularly in the early months when it struggled to deliver testing and protective equipment for hospital staff treating COVID-19 patients.
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