Author Michael Rosen: No 10 drinks party is a smack in the face
The writer was in a coma at the time the event was alleged to have taken place.

Author Michael Rosen has said an alleged rule-breaking drinks party in Downing Street during the first national lockdown, when he was in a coma with Covid is a āsmack in the faceā.
The former childrenās laureate, who is still suffering the after-effects of the illness, including memory loss and aches and pains, said the event showed ācontemptā for others and those in attendance at the party should come forward.
It has been alleged that a senior aide to Boris Johnson organised a ābring your own boozeā event in the garden behind No 10 on May 20 2020 and a growing number of Tories have hit out at the Prime Minister amid fresh claims he attended.
The allegations are being examined by senior official Sue Gray as part of her investigation into claims of lockdown-busting parties in Whitehall and Downing Street.
Everybody was doing their best to abide by the Government instructions. So this feels like a smack in the face. It feels like contempt
Rosen, who said he is struggling to see out of one eye and hear out of one ear, told BBC News: āMy first thought is the stories that my wife and family told me, that they were at home trying to maintain contact with me, get contact with me, because they couldnāt come in and see me, and of course, I could have died.
āWeāve just heard the awful stories all day of people who said goodbye to their loved ones from home on Zoom calls and phone calls.
āAnd the only way Emma (Rosenās wife) could stay in touch with me was to talk to the nurses and the doctors.
āEverybody was doing their best to abide by the Government instructions. So this feels like a smack in the face. It feels like contempt. It feels awful.ā
Asked if there should be a police investigation, Rosen said: āItās a daft situation, isnāt it? Because obviously, all the people who were at the party know they were there.
āThe police guard the entrance to 10 Downing Street, nobody can just stroll in. So they have the normal lists of parties, theyāve got a list of whoās allowed and who isnāt, so thereās a piece of paper, and theyāve the names on it that the police know.
āThey must have known that there was a very good chance that it was a gathering of more than one, two or three people, whatever was the exact number allowed with that moment.
āSo itās all a bit mysterious, and how are we 18 months on from there and suddenly discovering it? I mean, it canāt be believed, really.ā
He added: āAngela Rayner said āDoes Boris Johnson know whether he was at the party or not?ā
āI mean, he may not have known about it when he left given that booze was on offer, but the people who went to that party knew.
āThey should be coming to the House of Commons and saying, āYes guv, itās a fair cop, I was at the partyā.
āThat would be just the reasonable thing to do, but itās not happening.
āSo this kind of kicking into the long grass that weāre all familiar with from inquiries of all sorts, while people work out their alibis, it really wonāt do at all.
āItās not to be believed, itās a sense of contempt. On this occasion, itās a contempt for the House of Commons. People ask questions, and then they get batted away.ā
Rosen said the country is still dealing with āsocial traumaā as a result of the pandemic, adding: āThis in a way is just the opposite of dealing with it.
āInstead of the equivalent of wreaths at the Cenotaph, what weāre getting is, āOh, we were partying while you were doing thatā.
āItās an appalling feeling, just to think of that. Weāre trying to cope with something that has damaged us.ā