MPs could also be pressured to indicate help for Boris as Partygate vote looms – all we all know

Jun 19, 2023 at 7:26 PM
MPs could also be pressured to indicate help for Boris as Partygate vote looms – all we all know

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Thenreport could now go to a vote as one other Tory MP comes out in opposition to it

The Daily Mirror’s political editor, John Stevens, is reporting that it’s wanting possible that there are sufficient Conservative MPs against the report back to drive a vote on it.

He stated: “Tory MP Nick Fletcher says he will vote against Boris Johnson report Sounds like we could have a division”

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Jacob Rees Mogg stated it’s ‘vindictive’ to take away Boris Johnson’s parliamentary go

Conservative former cupboard minister Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg stated it was legit to problem the findings of the Privileges Committee, and stated eradicating Boris Johnson’s parliamentary go was “ridiculous”.

Addressing the proposed 90-day suspension from the Commons, stated: “A vindictive sanction, it seems to me, which they can’t implement because Mr Johnson has left Parliament. So they go from the vindictive to the ridiculous with not allowing him a parliamentary pass.”

He additionally instructed MPs: “It is absolutely legitimate to criticise the conduct of a committee, to criticise the members of a committee. That is politics.

“Our politics is adversarial… it is open to us within this chamber to accuse people within the bounds of good order of saying things that we disagree with. Outside this chamber freedom of speech is paramount.”

He added: “We must defend the right of freedom of speech. And, frankly, if politicians cannot cope with criticism you wonder what on earth they are doing with a political career.”

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PM’s former PPS defends her outdated boss

Conservative MP and former PPS for Boris Johnson Lia Nici defended her former boss saying the “prime minister is not the caretaker of the building, it is not their job to go round and look in rooms and decide who may be working and who may not be working”.

The MP for Great Grimsby stated: “I have to speak in the House today because I cannot see where the evidence is where Boris Johnson misled Parliament knowingly, intentionally or recklessly…. The reality is – is that Boris Johnson did not knowingly or intentionally mislead this House.”

She went on: “Sadly this is all becoming part of a kind of political opportunism for those people who don’t like Boris Johnson’s approach.”

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Sir Ian McKellen brings some drama to committee debate

Actor Sir Ian McKellen was current within the Commons for the controversy on the Privileges Committee report.

Sir Ian watched the proceedings from the MPs’ company gallery, often utilizing a pair of opera glasses.

He declined to touch upon leaving the House.

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Opposition MP manufacturers Boris as ‘a man child’

Labour’s Dame Angela Eagle (Wallasey) branded Boris Johnson’s departure the “narcissistic howl of a man child who won’t see that he only has himself to blame”.

She stated the report was “a damning verdict” on the previous Prime Minister.

She stated: “There has been no self-reflection, no apology, no acceptance of a shred of responsibility, just the narcissistic howl of a man child who won’t see that he only has himself to blame.”

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Harriet Harman: Conservative committee members have confronted ‘threats, intimidation and harassment’

The chair of the Privileges Committee says its Conservative members faced “threats, intimidation and harassment”.

Labour Harriet Harman thanked “every member of the Privileges Committee” for their “outstanding dedication and commitment”, adding: “But particularly the Conservative members of the committee. They have also had to be extraordinarily resilient.

“They have had to withstand a campaign of threats, intimidation, and harassment designed to challenge the legitimacy of the inquiry, to drive them off the Committee and thereby frustrate the intention of the House that this inquiry should be carried out. Yet through all this, they have not given into the intimidation.”

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Former Conservative minister says he will vote for the report

Conservative former minister Tobias Ellwood said he would “vote in support” of the Privileges Committee report.

He said: “Even though Boris Johnson has absented himself from this House, almost to some degree making this report somewhat academic, the nation wants to see its conclusion, the nation who puts us here wants to make sure that this process reaches its conclusion.”

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Harriet Harman: I offered to step aside as committee chair but government told me to stay

Harriet Harman said she offered to step aside from the committee but the Government gave her assurances she would not be seen as biased in her judgment of Boris Johnson.

Conservative former minister Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg referenced a precedent regarding the perception of bias in a House of Lords committee as he highlighted Ms Harman’s tweets criticising the ex-PM, asking: “In relation to her famous tweets, how does she think she met the Hoffmann test?”

Ms Harman, who chaired the committee, responded “I am happy to answer that point that is made. I was appointed by this House in the expectation that I would chair the committee with no one speaking against it.

“After the tweets were brought to light, they were highlighted, because I am concerned about the perception of fairness of the committee and I agree that perception matters, I made it my business to find out whether or not it would mean that the Government would not have confidence in me if I continued to chair the committee.

“I actually said I am more than happy to step aside because perception matters and I don’t want to do this if the Government doesn’t have confidence in me, because I need the whole House of have confidence in the work that the committee has mandated.

“I was assured that I should continue the work that the House had mandated with the appointment that the House had put me into and so I did just that.”

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Theresa May urges fellow MPs to vote in favour of the report

Theresa May urged her fellow MPs to vote in favour of the report.

The former Prime Minister stated all MPs are “under an obligation” to not repeat claims that mislead the House and likewise right the document on the first alternative, including: “Above all we are all responsible for our own actions.

“Beyond that this House has a responsibility to ensure standards are upheld by showing that we are willing to act against the interests of colleagues when the facts require it and in this case I believe they do.”

She added:“I will vote in favour of the report by the Privileges Committee, I urge all members of this House to do so – to uphold standards in public life, to show that we all recognise the responsibility we have to the people we serve and to help to restore faith in our parliamentary democracy.”

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Theresa May: I settle for the findings of the report

Conservative former prime minister Theresa May instructed the Commons she accepts the findings of the Privileges Committee’s report.

She instructed MPs: “It is a rigorous report and I accept its findings.”

“It is not easy to sit in judgment on friends and colleagues,” she stated, including “but friendship, working together, should not get in the way of doing what is right.

“I commend the members of the Privileges Committee for their painstaking work, and for their dignity in the face of slurs on their integrity. To all the members of the committee, this House should… say thank you for your service.”

She added: “This committee report matters. This debate matters. And this vote matters. They matter because they strike at the heart of the bond of trust and respect between the public and Parliament that underpin the workings of this place and of our democracy.”