Boris Johnson’s new communications chief has said the PM welcomed him into the job with a rendition of ‘I Will Survive’.
In his first interview since being appointed as Downing Street director of communications, Guto Harri told Welsh-language website Golwg360 the pair launched into the Gloria Gaynor classic after he asked Mr Johnson if he could survive the crisis over his leadership amid the ongoing partygate scandal.
Mr Harri, a former BBC journalist who worked for the prime minister in the same role when he was Mayor of London, insisted to the website that Mr Johnson is not “all clown”
He also told of how he saluted the prime minister when he greeted him in Downing Street on Friday afternoon and explained how Mr Johnson joked he should be taking the knee – a reference to Mr Harri’s move to take the knee while working as a broadcaster for GB News during an on-air discussion about England’s footballers.
Mr Harri later quit the channel after being suspended for the incident.
Live updates as PM branded ‘offensive’ after communications chief claims he sang ‘I Will Survive’
According to the Welsh-language website, Mr Harri said: “I walked in and I made a salute and said ‘prime minister, Guto Harri reporting for duty’ and he stood up from back to his desk and started taking the salute but then he said ‘What am I doing, I should take the knee for you.’
Carrie Johnson’s good friend leaves Boris Johnson’s top team as shake-up continues, Number 10 confirms
Sir Keir Starmer in the clear over claim he broke lockdown with office beer
Boris Johnson: Time to ‘move on’ from PM’s use of Jimmy Savile slur, says health secretary
“And we were both laughing. Then I asked ‘Are you going to survive Boris?’ And he said it in his deep voice, slowly and purposefully and started singing a little while finishing the sentence and saying ‘I Will Survive’.
“Inevitably he invited me to say ‘You’ve got all your life to live’ and he replied, ‘I’ve got all my love to give’, so we had a little blast of Gloria Gaynor!”
The interview continues: “He’s not all clown, but he’s a character who loves it. 90 per cent of our discussion was very serious but it shows that it is a character and that there is fun to be had. He’s not a vicious man as some misrepresent him.”
The prime minister’s official spokesman did not deny the report when pressed by reporters on Monday.
“I’m not going to get into the details of private conversations. But as you might expect, they are old colleagues,” he said.
Asked specifically if the pair sang ‘I Will Survive’, he replied: “Not getting into that. Private conversations.”
Explainer: Which officials have left Mr Johnson’s top team?
The PM’s spokesman also faced questions about Mr Harri’s previous work as an adviser to Chinese telecoms giant Huawei.
The spokesman said anyone employed by Number 10 would have had to go through the “requisite” security checks to do so.
In response to the interview, the PM’s former chief adviser Dominic Cummings insisted new hire Mr Harri was himself a clown and “a case study in how not to do government communications”.
He also referred to him as “Huawei Harri”.
Mr Harri was appointed as director of communications on Saturday as part of an overhaul of Mr Johnson’s Downing Street top team.
Read more: Which Conservative MPs have called for the PM to quit?
It comes after weeks of turbulence over claims of lockdown-breaching parties in Downing Street and across Whitehall, with the Met Police currently carrying out a probe into some events.
On the same day, Cabinet Office minister Steve Barclay was appointed as Mr Johnson’s new chief of staff while Tory MP Andrew Griffith was named the new head of the Number 10 Policy Unit.
The overhaul came after five senior Number 10 aids left their positions last week.
Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner joined in on criticising the anecdote revealed by the prime minister’s new communications chief.
In a tweet, Ms Rayner said reports of the PM singing ‘I Will Survive’ showed “they think its all just one big joke”.
Earlier, Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the comments were “offensive”.