Carrie Symonds’ mobile phone number revealed in Downing Street picture of Dilyn the dog
Carrie Symonds’ mobile phone number was inadvertently published online by Downing Street in a photograph showing it on her dog’s collar.
Pictures of Dilyn, owned by Ms Symonds and Boris Johnson, were taken by a taxpayer-funded photographer on Monday and shared on Flickr.
One of the pictures of the pet in the snow in the garden of 10 Downing Street clearly showed Ms Symonds’ phone number on the collar tag.
The photograph, taken by Pippa Fowles, a Ministry of Defence photographer seconded to No 10, has since been taken down, but the number appears to still be active.
The blunder came as Downing Street defended the use of three taxpayer-funded “vanity photographers” to chronicle the work of the Government and the prime ministerial pets.
Two civil servants and a special adviser take pictures of Mr Johnson and other Government ministers, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said.
Asked why it was necessary for the taxpayer to fund pictures of Larry the cat and Dilyn the dog, the spokesman said the photographers “document the work of not just the Prime Minister but the whole of the Cabinet” – apparently giving the two pets a promotion.
Pressed on what work the animals did for the Government, the spokesman said: “I point you back to what I have already said.”
A Labour source said: “The Government has made such a dog’s dinner of issues from the border response to kids’ education, Dilyn would be a marked improvement and probably waste less taxpayers’ cash.”
Pictures of the Prime Minister with Dilyn at Chequers were taken last year by Andrew Parsons, a party political special adviser who works part-time but earns the full-time equivalent of £100,000-£104,999.
A third photographer was recruited recently after being advertised with a salary of up to £60,635 a year.
The public will be rightly questioning why there is apparently no limit on the money that can be found to pay for a coterie of vanity photographers for the Prime Minister
“We have three photographers in No 10. We have an MoD photographer as one of those three, you have seen recently that we have recruited a cross-Government photographer and you will know of Andy Parsons,” the spokesman said.
“The most recent addition to the team is a cross-Government photographer, which means that the primary role of them is to work across Government with other Government departments and ministers.”
Asked why press photographers could not do that job, the spokesman said: “It is obviously important that we record the activity of the Government and… we make these pictures available for editorial use.
“You are aware that we allow for other photographers to accompany ministers and prime ministers on visits also.”
Deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner said: “The public will be rightly questioning why there is apparently no limit on the money that can be found to pay for a coterie of vanity photographers for the Prime Minister.”
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