A report by the senior civil servant Sue Gray has been published in full, stating many of the events at Downing Street "should not have been allowed to happen" and were "not in line with Covid guidance at the time".

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Boris Johnson apologised during Prime Minister's Questions and said he took "full responsibility for everything that took place on my watch".

Since 2015, the Suffolk town of Ipswich has oscillated from Conservative, to Labour and back to Tory in recent general elections. Its current MP is Tom Hunt who won in 2019 with a 5,479 vote majority.

In the wake of Ms Gray's report, what do people in the town make of her findings and what do they think should happen next?


'We want to put Covid behind us'
"This country needs to move forward," says Catherine Kersey.

Speaking to the BBC on the Buttermarket in Ipswich, she tells how her mother died of Covid.

Ms Kersey says she was not allowed to be with her mother when she died.

"My mum didn't die because Boris went to a few parties," she adds.

Ms Kersey's father died four weeks after her mother. Ms Kersey believes it was due to "shock".


'People it's affected most won't forget about it'
Ellie Copping, however, says it is not so easy to forget and move forward.

"It's too little too late," she says. "It's affected people, people living in care homes and stuff like that didn't get to see their families, didn't get to say goodbye and thousands of women have gone unsupported throughout pregnancies and took appointments by themselves every day.

She says she had to attend all of her medical appointments alone when she was pregnant with her son. These appointments included electroencephalogram (EEG) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.