No 10 spoke to Times before Carrie Johnson story pulled, Downing Street admits
The Times dropped a story claiming Boris Johnson tried to hire his now wife as his chief of staff when he was Foreign Secretary.

Downing Street has admitted there were conversations between Number 10 and The Times, after the newspaper dropped a report that claimed Boris Johnson tried to appoint his now wife to a Government role when he was Foreign Secretary.
According to the story in The Times on Saturday, Mr Johnson attempted to hire Carrie Johnson as his chief of staff at the Foreign Office in 2018.
The report was pulled from later editions of the paper, sparking questions over whether No 10 applied political pressure on its editors.
It is entirely a matter for publications, for journalists to decide on what they write
The Prime Ministerās spokesperson on Monday acknowledged there had been contact between Downing Street and The Times before and after the story was published.
Asked whether there were conversations after its initial publication specifically, the spokesperson told reporters: āThatās my understandingā.
He refused to say āwho spoke to whoā, but denied that it was Mr Johnson himself.
āIāve checked and Iāve been assured that he hasnāt spoken to anyone,ā he said.
āIām not aware of any calls by the PM.ā
The spokesperson added that āit is entirely a matter for publications, for journalists to decide on what they writeā.
On the allegations originally reported by The Times, he did not directly refute them but pointed to earlier denials by a spokesperson for Mrs Johnson, who said: āThese claims are totally untrue.ā
Mr Johnsonās spokesperson told journalists: āAs a function of my role, I donāt comment on what the Prime Minister did before he was Prime Minister.
āI think my political colleagues have over the weekend made clear that the storyās not true as has Mrs Johnsonās spokesperson.
āIām pointing to the on-the-record denials that have been made over the weekendā.
The spokesperson added that Mr Johnson ābelieves in hiring the right people for the right rolesā.
The author of The Timesā story, veteran journalist Simon Walters, said he stood by the story ā100%ā.
āI was in lengthy and detailed communication with No 10 at a high level, Ben Gascoigne and Mrs Johnsonās spokeswoman for up to 48 hours before the paper went to press. At no point did any of them offer an on-the-record denial of any element of the story,ā he told The New European.
āNor have any of these three offered an on-the-record denial to me since. No 10 and Mr Gascoigne did not deny it off-the-record either.ā
The Prime Ministerās former chief aide Dominic Cummings has supported the claims and alleged Mr Johnson also wanted to appoint his wife to a Government job in late 2020.
Mr Cummings tweeted: āThe āmissing storyā (pulled by Times after no10 call Fri night) is true. Walters repeatedly published accurate stories, e.g on illegal donations. Times pathetic to have folded & shd reverse ferret. Truth is worse! (Johnson) wanted to appoint girlfriend to gvt job in Q3 2020 tooā.
Asked whether Mr Johnson attempted to give her a Government job while he was in Downing Street, his spokesperson said: āAgain my understanding is that claim is also untrue but these claims have been reported before and deniedā.