Dominic Cummings tweets #SackHancock message as he renews hostilities with Health Secretary
- Dominic Cummings reignited his war of words with Matt Hancock today
- He tweeted ‘#SackHancock’ after minister hit back at bombshell claims he made
- Health Secretary said the Government ‘operated better’ after PM’s ex-aide left
- Said he had PM’s ‘wholesome support’ despite ex-aide demanding he be sackedÂ
Dominic Cummings has reiterated his view that Matt Hancock should be sacked as he reignited hostilities with the minister today.  Â
Mathematician Timothy Gowers had tweeted that the Health Secretary was ‘still not getting that earlier => shorter’ when it comes to lockdowns, and Mr Cummings replied: ‘Exactly #SackHancock’.Â
Giving evidence to MPs on the Government’s handling of the coronavirus crisis today, Mr Hancock had goaded the Vote Leave maverick as he claimed the Government had ‘operated better’ since he left Whitehall. Â
Mr Cummings had accused him of lying and incompetence, claiming the Cabinet minister should have been fired on several occasions when he was grilled last month.Â
But Mr Hancock said it was ‘telling’ that Mr Cummings had not provided MPs on the health and science select committees with written evidence to back up his allegations.Â
The Health Secretary said he had ‘no idea’ why Mr Cummings holds such a withering view of him, and insisted he was aware at the time last year that Mr Cummings wanted him to be sacked, but that he had always enjoyed the ‘wholesome support’ of Boris Johnson.
Matt Hancock today goaded Dominic Cummings as he claimed the Government had ‘operated better’ since the PM’s ex-aide left Whitehall
Mathematician Timothy Gowers had tweeted that the Health Secretary was ‘still not getting that earlier => shorter’ when it comes to lockdowns, and Mr Cummings replied: ‘Exactly #SackHancock’
Mr Cummings saved his fiercest criticism for Mr Hancock when he addressed the joint session of the committees at the end of May.Â
He attacked the Health Secretary over failings around the Government’s care homes policy, personal protective equipment (PPE) procurement and his public pledge on a coronavirus testing target.Â
Jeremy Hunt, the former health secretary and chairman of the Health Select Committee, said earlier this week that Mr Cummings was yet to submit written evidence to support the claims he made.Â
Mr Hancock said this morning he believed that was ‘telling’ and that he had acted with ‘honesty and integrity’ throughout the pandemic.Â
He said: ‘Well, it is telling that no evidence has been provided yet but there is a reason for that I think which is that throughout this I have got out of bed every morning with the view and the attitude that my job is to do everything I could to save lives and get this country out of the pandemic,’ he said.
‘I approached that with a mission-driven determination to make it happen. I tried to do that with an approach of honesty and integrity and critically answering questions both in public and in private to the best of my ability.’
Mr Cummings, pictured leaving Number 10 in November last year, told MPs last month that he had repeatedly urged Mr Johnson to sack Mr Hancock
Asked what the origins were for his dispute with Mr Cummings, Mr Hancock replied: ‘I have no idea. I worked directly with the Prime Minister from the start of this and of course I worked with his aides and his team as well. I have no idea.’Â
Mr Cummings told MPs last month that he had repeatedly urged Mr Johnson to sack Mr Hancock in 2020.Â
The Health Secretary said he was aware that Mr Cummings wanted him to be fired, telling the committees:Â ‘Yes, because he briefed the newspapers at the time.Â
‘Or somebody briefed the newspapers, I now have a better idea who it was.’
Asked if he had raised objections to that, Mr Hancock said:Â ‘Yes, of course and I had the Prime Minister’s wholesome support all the way through.’Â Â
Mr Cummings left the Government in November last year after losing an internal Number 10 power struggle. Â
Mr Hancock told MPs that things improved after Mr Cummings left Whitehall. Â
‘I think the best thing to say about this, and this will be corroborated by lots of people in Government, the best thing to say, is that Government has operated better in the past six months,’ he said.