The Guardian - 31.07.2019

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  • The Guardian Wednesday 31 July 2019


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News and Sport


Labour risks election
wipeout if it fails to see the
Johnson threat
Aditya Chakrabortty
Page 1

The Mark Field inquiry
is over - and it feels like men
closing ranks
Sian Norris
Page 4

Deportation row
Home Offi ce spends
£250,000 in three months
on cancelled fl ights
Page 5

Arwa Mahdawi
Why we should all be
unfollowing Donald
Trump on Twitter
Page 3

Golf
Georgia Hall on winning
the women’s British Open
and then losing the trophy
Page 36

Period drama
Are menstruation savvy
skincare products a boon
or a cynical sales ploy?
Page 6

Weather
Page 34

Cartoon
Journal, page 5

Cryptic crossword
Back of Journal

Quick crossword
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n
hy

Stephanie Kirchgaessner
Washington
Nick Hopkins

Two of the most senior intelligence
offi cials in the US and UK privately
shared concerns about “our strange
situation” as the FBI launched its
2016 investigation into whether Don-
ald Trump’s campaign was colluding
with Russia, the Guardian has learned.
Text messages between Andrew
McCabe , the deputy director of the
FBI at the time, and Jeremy Fleming ,
his then counterpart at MI5 , now the
head of GCHQ , also reveal their mutual
surprise at the result of the EU referen-
dum, which some US offi cials regarded
as a “wake -up call”, according to a per-
son familiar with the matter.
While Russia had previously been
viewed as a country that would seek
to interfere in western elections, the
Brexit vote was viewed by some within
the FBI as a sign that Russian activi-
ties had possibly been successful, the
person said.

and is relying on Conservative and
D emocratic Unionist party MPs to
back his Brexit strategy of taking the
UK out of the EU by 31 October – unless
he suspends parliament to achieve a
no-deal exit.
Ian Lavery, chair of the Labour party,
said it was a “staggering admission
from the prime minister’s right-hand
man”. “As Dominic Cummings says
himself, the Conservatives don’t care
about anything apart from looking
after their rich friends – whether that
means selling off our NHS to Ameri-
can corporations in pursuit of a Trump
trade deal, or giving tax cuts to big
businesses while cutting public ser-
vices. We need a general election and
a Labour government to protect our
health service from the likes of Boris
Johnson,” Lavery said.
At the Nudgestock event in 2017,
Cummings said Johnson and Michael
Gove, the co-leaders of the Vote Leave
campaign who are now running the
government, had recognised the

dangers of being seen to go back on
their pledge to give £350m a week to
the NHS. He said the two men real-
ised they needed to keep their promise
on the NHS “not only from the self-
preservation point of view but also
from the political smart point of view


  • they understood the power of actu-
    ally delivering”.
    He said Johnson was 99.9% com-
    mitted to implementing the pledge
    of an extra £350m a week for the NHS
    after Brexit when it was discussed after
    the referendum result.
    Since becoming prime minister,
    Johnson has not repeated that prom-
    ise but there are reports that he has
    ordered cash for the NHS promised by
    Theresa May to be speeded up so that
    the frontline sees the benefi t. An extra


£4bn is due to be pumped into the NHS
over the course of this fi nancial year.
On the Vote Leave pledge to bring
back £350m a week for the NHS, Cum-
mings said: “Me, Michael and Boris
had talked about this in private before
the vote and actually on the day of vic-
tory in the Vote Leave offi ce, so when
Boris came in on Friday 24th and
punched the air and whatnot, he and
I walked into this little room, amid beer
cans and craziness, and I said to him:
‘The fi rst thing you do is say we are
going to meet this promise .’
“And he smashed his fi st down on
the table and said: ‘Absolutely no ques-
tion about it .’ And if Michael had not
taken out Boris, and Boris had run as
leader, I am 99.9% recurring – as sure
as I can be about anything – that Boris
would have said I will honour the
promises we made in that campaign.”
During a stump speech on the lead-
ership campaign trail, Johnson told
Conservative members that the NHS
absolutely need ed to be reformed, as
he fi red them up for a general election
by asking them to be ready to “wallop
Jeremy Corbyn”.
Asked by one party member what
he would do with the NHS, Johnson
told the crowd the health service was
a “crowning glory” but was “not get-
ting the kind of support and indeed the
kind of changes and management that
it needs”, suggesting he would aim to
undertake an overhaul of the health
service. He said Simon Stevens , the
NHS chief executive, had once helped
him get elected president of the Oxford
Union as a student, and together they
would “sort things out”.
Friends of Cummings said: “Dom
was clear that he thinks the British
public care most about leaving the EU
and want more money for the NHS.
And with this prime minister, that’s
exactly what public will get.”

Their exchanges off er new insights
into the start of the FBI’s Russia inves-
tigation, and how British intelligence
appears to have played a key role in
the early stages.
In one exchange in August 2016,
Fleming noted that members of the
FBI and MI5 had “met on our strange
situation”, a veiled reference to dis-
cussions about Russian activities,
according to the source.
The text messages between the two
men were infrequent and cryptic and
did not contain specifi c or sensitive
materials, but occurred with some reg-
ularity after the referendum in June


  1. A spokesperson for McCabe
    declined to comment.
    The exchanges underscore a sensi-
    tive issue in the US – namely the role
    foreign intelligence services played in
    the FBI’s decision to initiate an investi-
    gation into the Trump campaign.
    On 31 July 2016, the FBI opened a
    covert counterintelligence investi-
    gation code named Crossfi re Hurricane
    into the then presidential candidate ’s
    possible collusion with Russia.


The investigation was eventually
taken over by the special counsel Rob-
ert Mueller , who has said there were
“multiple, systematic eff orts to inter-
fere in our election” by Russia.
Mueller’s 448-page report did
not establish a criminal conspiracy
between the Trump campaign and
Russia, but it did identify incidents in
which Trump attempted to obstruct
justice in the investigation, and did
not clear the president of wrongdoing.
US and UK intelligence agencies
frequently share information, but the
exchanges between McCabe and Flem-
ing appear to refl ect a desire for a direct
line of communication given what was
seen as a developing problem on both
sides of the Atlantic.
When Boris Johnson, the UK for-
eign secretary at the time, was asked
in November 2017 whether Russia had
played any role in British elections, he
told MPs in a select committee that he
had not seen any evidence of such an
occurrence.
When asked in a follow -up if Russia
had sought to play a role, Johnson said:
“I don’t know about sought to play, but
as far as I know they played no role.”
Almost every senior FBI offi cial
involved in the initial Trump investi-
gation has since left the FBI , including
McCabe. In many cases, they were dis-
missed by Trump offi cials.

New light on UK’s early role


in Trump-Russia inquiry


Tory MPs mostly


don’t care about


NHS – Cummings


 Continued from page 1

 Dominic Cummings condemned
the Tories in 2017. He is now the new
prime minister’s senior adviser
PHOTOGRAPH: ALASTAIR GRANT/AP

‘As Cummings says
himself, the Tories
don’t care about
anything apart from
looking after their
rich friends’

Ian Lavery
Labour party chairman

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