Parliament 'not a safe place to work' claims shadow minister in wake of Pincher case

Published: 17 July 2022 | Written by Super User | Print | Hits: 1689
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Parliament 'not a safe place to work' claims shadow minister in wake of Pincher case

A shadow minister has claimed that Parliament is "not a safe place to work" amid controversy surrounding the resignation of the deputy chief whip over groping allegations.

Chris Pincher has been suspended by the Tory party over 'drunken groping' claims

PA Chris Pincher has been suspended by the Tory party over 'drunken groping' claims

Shadow armed forces minister Luke Pollard told Sky News that "wholesale change" is needed as he called for "higher standards" in politics.

The prime minister has been criticised over his delay in suspending deputy chief whip Chris Pincher from the Tory parliamentary party over claims he drunkenly assaulted two men.

Mr Pincher had already been forced to quit his role in the Tory whips' office - in which he was responsible for party discipline and the smooth running of government business at Westminster - after the claim emerged this week.

Now, after a formal complaint was made against him to parliament's Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme (ICGS), he will be forced to sit as an independent outside the Conservative group.

Commenting on the case, shadow armed forces minister Luke Pollard told Sky News: "We need a wholesale change in this because, I'm afraid, Parliament is not a safe place to work as it should be for so many of the young people in particular who work there.

"We need to be setting higher standards than we have at the moment but I'm afraid the culture is set from the top and the prime minister has been so very clear that standards in public life - decency, integrity, honesty - don't apply."

Tory Andrew Bridgen suggested Downing Street was guilty of "double standards" in the difference between the handling of Mr Pincher and the handling of Neil Parish, the Conservative who was forced to stand down as an MP after admitting watching pornography in the Commons.

Mr Bridgen told BBC Newsnight: "For those who wish to maintain confidence in the prime minister or even regain it, it has been a particularly bad day.

"Neil was a very independent-minded Conservative backbencher, he never really sought patronage and he did hold ministers to account.

"Chris Pincher is seen as an arch-loyalist and I think that, to most people, will be the reason for the difference in their treatment. And that's not tenable either."

Labour's deputy leader Angela Rayner said the prime minister had been "dragged kicking and screaming into taking any action at all" and that the scandal was "yet more evidence of his appalling judgement".

Reference: Sky News: 

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