Science

Bar Dominic Cummings from Sage meetings, Labour urges


Labour has urged the government to stop the prime minister’s chief political adviser, Dominic Cummings, from attending meetings of the secret scientific group advising on the coronavirus pandemic amid concerns over whether its independence has been compromised.

A leaked list revealed by the Guardian shows that both Cummings and a data scientist said to have worked on the Vote Leave campaign, Ben Warner, were among 23 attendees present at a meeting of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) on the day Boris Johnson announced a nationwide lockdown.

Multiple attendees of Sage told the Guardian that both Cummings and Warner had been taking part in meetings of the group as far back as February.

Jonathan Ashworth, the shadow health secretary, said there were significant questions for the government to answer over the credibility of its decision-making and how non-scientists have influenced policy.


“The concern is that political advisers have influenced the debate,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “So the way to clear this up is for all the minutes to be published … People have not got full confidence that the government is being entirely clear and transparent.”

Downing Street said Cummings and Warner had attended some Sage meetings and continue to listen to some meetings now held online. .

“Occasionally they ask questions or offer help when scientists mention problems in Whitehall,” a No 10 spokesman said. “It is factually wrong and damaging to sensible public debate to imply [Sage] advice is affected by government advisers listening to discussions.”

However, Ashworth said this claim should be substantiated with evidence. “We don’t know if all they were doing was just listening in,” he added.

Questions remain over government decisions, Ashworth said. He suggested the UK was slow to go into lockdown and queried why large events such as the Liverpool v Athletico Madrid football game and the Cheltenham festival – attended by more than 250,000 people over four days from 10 March – were allowed to go ahead.

Throughout the outbreak, ministers have reiterated that their policies have been guided by scientific advice. However, this process has been shrouded in secrecy and the extent of political influence remains unclear.

In a statement, Ashworth added that Cummings was “not a medical or scientific expert” and the government must make clear he can no longer participate or attend, “if the public are to have confidence in the Sage”.

The government’s former chief scientific adviser David King said party political advisers never attended Sage meetings during his tenure from 2000 to 2007 and that it was wrong for them to now do so.

“If a [political adviser] is sitting on Sage it’s a fair assumption that they are at least in part playing this role, one which it’s simply inappropriate and wrong for them to be playing,” he tweeted.

Prof Stephen Powis, the NHS England medical director, said he was confident that Sage had been a forum for scientific discussion among experts.

“It is the experts from a variety of backgrounds who discuss the evidence, they discuss the evidence base of the various topics, they come to conclusions around that evidence base,” he told the Today programme.

“It is then, of course, the role of Sage to advise the government. I have been confident that what happens at Sage is a scientific discussion involving the scientists and the experts who are members of Sage.”

But the former head of the civil service, Bob Kerslake, said there was a risk “the government is leading the science when it’s supposed to be the other way round”.

Sage participants told the Guardian that Cummings was not merely observing the advisory meetings, but actively participating in discussions about the formation of advice.

It understood that while the chief medical officers and chief scientific advisers from the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have been allowed to listen in on Sage meetings, they have been doing so as observers. Unlike Cummings, they were not allowed to ask questions, having to instead submit them in writing in advance.

The editor of the influential medical journal, the Lancet, said Cummings’ attendance of Sage meetings would call into question the independent scientific advice that it is mandated to provide.

“If it is true that Dominic Cummings attended meetings of Sage, then the government led by Boris Johnson has utterly corrupted independent scientific advice,” Richard Horton tweeted. “But I’m afraid to say that the scientists who sit on Sage have allowed themselves to be corrupted, including the [chief scientific officer/chief medical officer].”





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