The leader of the Senedd Conservatives, Andrew RT Davies, has defended Boris Johnson saying the Prime Minister "has his confidence".
Welsh Conservative group leader Andrew RT Davies was on BBC News Channel and asked about Boris Johnson.
As well as sticking up for Johnson he also showed support for Commons leader Jacob Rees-Mogg, who earlier this week seemingly "forgot" Mr Davies' name.
Mr Davies, an MS for South Wales Central, said: "I met with the Prime Minister yesterday and he enjoys my confidence. I want to see the Sue Gray report just like everybody else because it does encapsulate all aspects of the allegations in Downing Street during the pandemic.
"I'm someone who sits on the Standard Committee in the Assembly, I've done that for three years now, one thing I've learned during that tenure is instead of following the headlines look at the evidence. When we get reports before us they are very detailed and concise and very often the evidence that comes in those reports bears no relation to the headline that the media have been pushing over a number of weeks.
"Then we can all digest the findings of that and the Prime Minister has said he will go before the House of Commons, rightly, and take as many questions as MPs, who are the democratically elected representatives of the people of the UK want to put to him."
He was asked if the confidence he said he has in the PM is dependent on the findings of the Sue Gray report.
"That report will have all the evidence, I'm not part of the Westminster process because I'm a member of the Welsh Parliament so I'm not familiar with all the events that have gone on so I want to be able to be in a position to read a report that has access to all the people involved to form an opinion," he said.
He was also asked about the leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg failing to name him when directly asked in the Commons.
Smiling, Mr Davies, said he met with Mr Rees-Mogg on Wednesday and "ironically it may seem we have some family connections".
"The Rees in Jacob's surname comes from his family connections in the village of Wick in the Vale of Glamorgan and my family, on my mother's side, hail from the same village so we may well have a family connection and families do sometimes drift apart.
"On a serious note, the leader of the House was technically correct. We do not have, sadly, a designated leader in Wales under the Conservative party constitution. Simon Hart leads our contingent in Westminster, I lead the Welsh Conservatives in the Welsh Parliament and a gentleman called Glyn Davies, who is a former MP, is chairman of the voluntary party in Wales.
"I want to see that constitutional change so we do have a designated leader in Wales and I'm sure the leader of the House wouldn't have wanted to mislead the House from the despatch box."
Asked if he was frustrated by his comments, and those he made about Scottish leader Douglas Ross, Mr Davies said: "Douglas Ross is not a political lightweight. Constitutionally, he is leader of the Scottish party and has been voted to that position by the membership of the Scottish Conservative Party.
"I met with Jacob yesterday, we had a very convivial meeting and I take the comments he said in the Commons with a pinch of salt because I've explained the position to you. I enjoy being the leader of the Conservatives in the Welsh Parliament, putting my shoulder to the wheel as I've done for nearly 11 years now making sure we advance in Wales."
He was asked if there was a political reason behind Boris Johnson announcing restrictions in England are being lifted, he said: "There was scientific reasons, we've gone through two years of hell with restrictions and civil liberties taken away, for obvious reasons as we've been going through a pandemic, but any Government who sits on keeping these restrictions in place, like we're seeing in Wales with the Welsh Labour government is being in dereliction of its duties. We need to return those civil liberties, we need to reopen the economy and get back to a sense of normality and start rebuilding our lives.
"If the science supports it then all these measures stack up. No government can keep these measures in place.
"We've built up huge debt in this pandemic fighting it, and the economic consequences as well as the health consequences.
"It's vital that we get the economy firing on all cylinders so we can start fighting the huge waiting lists. Today in Wales we're getting the latest NHS waiting lists when already one in five people are already on a waiting list."
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