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Boris Johnson says he won’t ‘take the knee’ because he believes in ‘substance not gestures’

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson participate in a national "clap for carers" to show thanks for the work of Britain's NHS (National Health Service) workers (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images) - Credit: AFP via Getty Images

Boris Johnson has said he will not ‘take the knee’ in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, because he believes in ‘substance’ not ‘gestures’, whilst also being questioned why there were not more black people at the top of government.

Speaking on an LBC radio phone-in, the prime minister – who was pictured performing a press-up on the front of the Daily Mail on Saturday – expressed concern that some had been pressurised into doing so following the death of George Floyd in the United States.

‘I don’t want people to be bullied into doing things they don’t necessarily want to do,’ he said.

‘If you think of what happened with those police officers standing at the Cenotaph, where they were being insulted in quite aggressive terms by some members of the crowd and told to take the knee.

‘Some of them did and it was very difficult then for the others who didn’t. That’s my position.


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‘I think it is very, very important that you don’t do things that make life difficult or embarrassing.’

His comments came after foreign secretary Dominic Raab was criticised last month for saying he would only take the knee for ‘the Queen and the missus when I asked her to marry me’.

Johnson said he believed in practical action to tackle prejudice and discrimination, highlighting his record in promoting black police officers while London mayor.

‘I don’t believe in gestures, I believe in substance. I believe in doing things that make a practical difference. Of course there are injustices that we need to rectify. There is prejudice out there. We need to fight it,’ he said.

The prime minister was also asked why there were not more black people at the top of government.

He acknowledged that, while there are a number of a black and Asian minority ethnic ministers in the government, there are just two in the cabinet and neither is black.

‘Of course we can do more and we will do more. We need to make progress and we will. I think about this a lot. It is something I want to get right. We need to reflect the country we serve,’ he said.

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