Partygate
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Partygate
Summary
Partygate is a political scandal[1]. Partygate draws 295 Wikipedia views per month (political_scandal category, ranking #17 of 117).[2]
Key Facts
- Partygate is in the country of United Kingdom[3].
- Partygate's image is recorded as Sue Gray report Fig 8.jpg[4].
- Partygate's instance of is recorded as political scandal[5].
- Partygate's Commons category is recorded as Westminster lockdown parties controversy[6].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Boris Johnson[7].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Shaun Bailey[8].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Allegra Stratton[9].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Simon Case[10].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Jack Doyle[11].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Martin Reynolds[12].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Dominic Cummings[13].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as James Slack[14].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Kate Josephs[15].
- Partygate's participant is recorded as Carrie Johnson[16].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[17].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[18].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[19].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[20].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[21].
- Partygate's has effect is recorded as resignation[22].
- Partygate's investigated by is recorded as Metropolitan Police[23].
- Partygate's investigated by is recorded as Commons Select Committee of Privileges[24].
- Partygate's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11rkct76rt[25].
- Partygate's Lex ID is recorded as Partygate[26].
- Partygate's France 24 topic ID is recorded as partygate[27].
Why It Matters
Partygate draws 295 Wikipedia views per month (political_scandal category, ranking #17 of 117).[2] Partygate has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Partygate is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]