It was revealed to Dominic Raab this morning during a TV interview that Boris Johnson had been informed “in person” of a previous “formal complaint” regarding disgraced MP Chris Pincher

It was revealed to Dominic Raab this morning during a TV interview that Boris Johnson had been informed “in person” of a previous “formal complaint” regarding disgraced MP Chris Pincher

It was revealed to Dominic Raab this morning during a TV interview that Boris Johnson had been informed “in person” of a previous “formal complaint” regarding disgraced MP Chris Pincher.

After former top civil servant Simon McDonald criticized Number 10’s handling of the most recent Westminster sleaze issue, the Deputy Prime Minister was grilled on BBC Breakfast.

Following allegations that he inappropriately touched two men at a swanky London members’ club while intoxicated, Mr. Pincher quit last week as the Tory deputy chief whip.

A number of new allegations against the 52-year-old Conservative politician that span several years have surfaced, and he is currently also under suspension from his position as an MP.

The latest row has threatened to imperil Boris Johnson’s political future yet again, with questions being asked about what the Prime Minister knew of Mr Pincher’s conduct before handing him a Government role.

One northern Tory MP, who has not been a regular rebel, today issued a chilling warning to Mr Johnson that he had little time left in office.

They told MailOnline: ‘The party has had enough. I’ll be amazed if Boris gets to Christmas.

‘It’s more about No10 incompetence than Chris. More lies. It’s either over for Boris, or it’s over for over a 100 colleagues.’

Downing Street has insisted the PM – who chaired a Cabinet meeting this morning focussed on the Government’s response to the cost-of-living crisis – was not aware of ‘specific allegations being looked at’ concerning Mr Pincher before appointing him.

But No10 admitted Mr Johnson knew of ‘media reports’ and ‘some allegations that were either resolved or did not progress to a formal comlaint’.

Downing Street also stressed the PM took advice on giving Mr Pincher the deputy chief whip role in February, but found it was ‘not appropriate’ to block the appointment because of ‘unsubstantiated allegations’.

Lord McDonald of Salford gave critics of Mr Johnson further ammunition today when he penned a bombshell letter to a parliamentary watchdog and claimed No10 ‘keep changing their story and are still not telling the truth’.

He detailed how the PM was told ‘in person’ about a ‘formal complaint’ concerning Mr Pincher in the summer of 2019.

The crossbench peer, the former top official at the Foreign Office, referred to a complaint by a ‘group of officials’ at the department about Mr Pincher’s behaviour when he was a Foreign Office minister.

In a letter to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Lord McDonald wrote: ‘The original No10 line is not true and the modification is still not accurate. Mr Johnson was briefed in person about the initiation and outcome of the investigation.

‘There was a “formal complaint”. Allegations were “resolved” only in the sense that the investigation was completed; Mr Pincher was not exonerated.

‘To characterise the allegations as “unsubstantiated” is therefore wrong.’

Lord McDonald said that Mr Pincher ‘deceived me and others in 2019’, adding: ‘He cannot be allowed to use the confidentiality of the process three years ago to pursue his predatory behaviour in other contexts.’

Soon after Lord McDonald published his letter on Twitter, Mr Raab was quizzed about the crossbench peer’s claims as he continued his round of TV and radio interviews this morning.

The Deputy PM, who was Foreign Secretary at the time of the 2019 complaint, insisted he was ‘very confident’ in the decisions that were taken at the time and said he went ‘above and beyond’ Lord McDonald’s advice to him by referring the complaint to the Cabinet Office.

Mr Raab had earlier revealed he ‘spoke to’ Mr Pincher ‘in no uncertain terms’ when the past complaint was made about his behaviour, but he defended him as an ‘exceptional’ minister.

‘We were clear that what happened was inappropriate, but we resolved it without going for a formal disciplinary process,’ he told LBC Radio.

‘I spoke directly to Chris Pincher in no uncertain terms and I referred it to the Cabinet Office to seek that assurance.’

Responding to Lord McDonald’s letter, Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner claimed the PM’s ‘desperate attempts to cover up what he knew about sexual assault complaints against Chris Pincher before appointing him have been blown out the water’.

‘It is now clear that the PM knew about the seriousness of these complaints but decided to promote this man to a senior position in government anyway. He refused to act and then lied about what he knew,’ she added.

The Liberal Democrats also seized on the peer’s letter to call on the PM to ‘own up to his web of lies and finally come clean today’.

Senior Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, a critic of the PM, called for a response from Mr Johnson and No10 to Lord McDonald’s claims.

He told Sky News: ‘They need to understand the scale and the gravity of the story and, indeed, get ahead of it. It is dominating the news day-after-day-after-day.’

Mr Ellwood claimed ministers were being sent out to face the media with a briefing that ‘only lasts a number of hours until it has to be corrected’.

Lord McDonald continued his assault on No10 later this morning when he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘It is very unusual for a retired official to do what I have done this morning.

‘I did it by myself, because what I have seen and read over the last few days I knew to be wrong. And you know, things get to a point where you have to do the right thing.’

He added: ‘First of all, No10 have had five full days to get the story correct and that has still not happened.’

oust Mr Johnson from Number 10, have been emboldened to launch another effort to get rid of the PM in the wake of the fresh sleaze row.

They are plotting to change Conservative Party rules to allow Mr Johnson to soon face another no confidence vote.

This is despite the PM having won a contest on his leadership last month that granted him 12 months’ immunity from another challenge under current rules.

The rebel plot will see them try to secure key posts on the 1922 Committee, the powerful Tory body in charge of leadership contests, in a battle with PM loyalists.

But, with elections to the 1922 executive not due to be held until next week and MPs going their summer break later this month, Mr Johnson is set to be safe from another widespread revolt until the autumn.

The northern MP who warned Mr Johnson he would be out of office by Christmas predicted that the revolt against the PM’s leadership would ‘come to a head in the three weeks in September’ before the Tory conference in Birmingham.

They added that No10 might be hoping the summer recess would act as a firebreak to stem rebel efforts to force out Mr Johnson, but there was ‘no chance’ that would work.

One veteran Tory aide said No10’s bungling of the crisis had been ‘unbelievable’.

‘Their modus operandi has always been to issue flat out denials no matter what,’ they told MailOnline. ‘It is finally catching up with them.’

The PM chaired a Cabinet meeting this morning after being stung by a backlash from among his top ministers over his handling of the Pincher row.

It follows claims that Mr Johnson joked about the ‘handsy’ MP being ‘Pincher by name, pincher by nature’.

Mr Johnson will use today’s meeting to focus on the cost-of-living crisis causing misery for struggling Britons.

The PM will herald changes to the National Insurance thresholds – due to come into effect tomorrow – as ‘the single biggest tax cut in a decade’.

Mr Johnson said ahead of today’s Cabinet meeting: ‘Tomorrow is an important moment in our mission to ease the burden on households and rebuild our economy, as the single biggest tax cut in a decade comes into force.

‘The list of people who will benefit is vast – from hairdressers and care workers to receptionists – around 30 million British workers will save up to £330 a year on their National Insurance contributions.

‘But we’re not just providing help right now, we’re investing record sums in infrastructure, skills and technology to level up and raise productivity across the whole country.

‘Because that’s the responsible, long-term way to address the cost of living, keeping our borrowing and debt under control, so we don’t saddle our children with a massive mountain of debt, and paving the way for more tax cuts in the future.

‘That’s how my government will get our country through these tough times.’

It will be Mr. Johnson’s most recent attempt to put the recent Tory sleaze controversy behind him after he returned to Britain last week following a nine-day absence from Westminster to attend the NATO, G7, and Commonwealth meetings.

It meant that Mr. Johnson was spared the consequences of two painful by-election losses.

However, after the resignation of Mr. Pincher as the Tory deputy chief whip, the PM returned to the UK at the end of the previous week to find even greater domestic unrest.