‘Even the Treasury is now razzing Matt’: Jeremy Hunt’s officials accused of ‘trolling’ Hancock after his department’s Twitter account ‘leaks’ its own WhatsApp messages about Chancellor’s Budget
The Treasury was tonight accused of ‘trolling’ Matt Hancock over his WhatsApp nightmare by ‘leaking’ their own messages about Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Budget.
Less than two hours after Mr Hunt stood up in the House of Commons to deliver his Budget, the Treasury’s official Twitter account published a tongue-in-cheek video.
It showed a mocked-up version of a group chat between Government departments, in which they shared ideas for the Chancellor’s fiscal package.
Alongside the video, the Treasury posted on Twitter: ‘BREAKING NEWS: Spring Budget WhatsApp Files leaked. Share the scoop with your friends & family on WhatsApp.’
The clear reference to the leak of Mr Hancock’s own WhatsApp messages astonished social media users.
‘Even the Treasury is now razzing Matt Hancock,’ one wrote, while another added: ‘Hunt and the Treasury now basically trolling Matt Hancock on work’s time.’
Last month, the bombshell leak of Mr Hancock’s personal messages from the Covid pandemic saw the Daily Telegraph handed a trove of more than 100,000 WhatsApps.

Less than two hours after Jeremy Hunt stood up in the House of Commons to deliver his Budget, the Treasury’s official Twitter account published a tongue-in-cheek video

Alongside the video, the Treasury posted on Twitter: ‘BREAKING NEWS: Spring Budget WhatsApp Files leaked. Share the scoop with your friends & family on WhatsApp.’

The clear reference to the leak of ex-health secretary Matt Hancock’s own WhatsApp messages astonished social media users
Texts allegedly showed how Mr Hancock rejected calls to test all residents going into English care homes for Covid, and discussed how the pandemic could ‘propel’ his career.
The catalogue of revelations sparked fury among Brits, with some calling for the former health secretary to be investigated by police.
But Mr Hancock’s team vehemently deny accusations that have come in the wake of the WhatsApp leaks, saying they are one-sided and missing a huge amount of context.
Mr Hancock was suspended as a Tory MP in November over his stint on reality TV show ‘I’m A Celebrity’.
He now sits in the House of Commons as an independent MP and has announced his intention to quit Parliament at the next general election.
The Treasury’s attempt to capitalise on Mr Hancock’s WhatsApp controversy to promote Mr Hunt’s Budget this afternoon prompted fury on social media.
Their video revealed ‘leaked’ texts sent from other parts of Whitehall – including the departments for Education, Transport and Work and Pensions – as part of a mocked-up chat.
One Twitter commentator, who claims to be a Labour supporter, said: ‘Shining a light on your own parties sleaze isn’t exactly a conventional way of advertising.’
Another added: ‘Thank you for demonstrating that the current government is utterly contemptuous of basic standards in public office. You think the Hancock stuff was just a wee joke.’
The video concludes with a fake message from No10 featuring an animated image of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak celebrating.
Multiple Twitter uses described the whole clip as ‘cringe’, ‘toe-curling’, ’embarrassing’ with one asking: ‘Where is your dignity?’
Twitter user George Jones added: ‘Who signed this off? One of the most tone-deaf things I’ve seen.’
MailOnline approached The Treasury and Mr Hancock’s representative for comment about the video.
MailOnline has not seen the full WhatsApp exchanges between Mr Hancock and other Whitehall officials so cannot confirm the context of the Covid exchanges.
The messages were originally leaked by Isabel Oakeshott, the journalist who helped Mr Hancock write his book Pandemic Diaries.
Mr Hancock’s spokesman has said the WhatsApp exchanges present an ‘entirely partial account’ and that ‘the right place to consider everything about the pandemic objectively is in the public inquiry’.