and nato defence leaders meet to discuss ongoing support for ukraine, including a training timeline for the vital f16 fighterjets kyiv has been pleading for to help with their counteroffensive. but first, for the next half hour, we are going to focus in on a monumental day here in uk politics the release of the parliamentary report into borisjohnson. the report by the privileges committee found that the former prime minister deliberately and repeatedly misled mps about parties at 10 downing street when coronavirus lockdown measures were in place. the committee says it would have recommended suspending him as an mp for 90 days if he hadn t already stood down from the role after he saw the report last week. it also recommends the former pm should not get a pass which allows ex mps to access parliament after they leave. mrjohnson has admitted his statements about the parties misled parliament, but denied doing
we had jeremy hunt s former deputy at the foreign office, not an mp any more, saying they have just thrown away £60 billion and we have to find a way to make this back. i mean, how would you define the mood among the current serving mps? those are both ex mps. maybe prominent figures in the party, but in a sense they don t matter. the people around liz truss, how are they viewing this? i think the short answer is they feel pretty bleak about everything at the moment. she has managed to effectively worry all sides of the party, really. those who backed tax cuts and supported her, are now annoyed she has rowed back on some of the tax cuts she promised. those who didn t support those policies feel she is not the right person for the job. speaking to lots of conservative mps about this yesterday, one of the big themes that came up in conversation, particularly after the press conference she gave in the afternoon, was, the thing is, it is notjust the chancellor, it is her. these are her po