Disgraced Tory MP Neil Parish ‘broke law’ by
watching porn in Commons
Parish resigns over ‘moment of madness’, and claims
‘it was tractors I was looking at on the internet’
Neil Parish outside his home in Somerset. ‘I will have
to live with this for the rest of my life,’ he said after resigning.
Toby Helm
& Michael Savage
Sat 30 Apr
2022 20.13 BST
Disgraced
Tory MP Neil Parish, who resigned his seat on Saturday after admitting he had
twice watched pornography in the House of Commons chamber, appeared to have
committed a criminal offence which carried a maximum two-year prison sentence,
Labour said.
Parish, who
had represented the safe west country seat of Tiverton and Honiton since 2010,
said that on the first occasion he watched porn on his mobile phone next to other
MPs, including women, he had done so by accident.
But in an
emotional interview announcing his resignation, in which he came close to
breaking down in tears, he said his “biggest crime” was to have done so again –
this time deliberately and in what he called “a moment of madness” – while
waiting to vote.
Explaining
what had happened, Parish, who also runs a farm, told BBC Politics South West:
“The situation was that – funnily enough it was tractors I was looking at. I
did get into another website that had a very similar name and I watched it for
a bit which I shouldn’t have done.
“But my
crime – biggest crime – is that on another occasion I went in a second time.”
Asked if
that was deliberate, he admitted: “That was deliberate … that was sitting waiting
to vote on the side of the chamber.” Parish added: “I will have to live with
this for the rest of my life. I made a huge terrible mistake and I’m here to
tell the world.”
Jess
Phillips
Jess
Phillips, Labour’s shadow minister for domestic abuse and safeguarding, said it
appeared that Parish ‘of his own admission’ had committed a criminal offence.
Photograph: ParliamentTV
The
dramatic resignation, after a week of lurid allegations about MPs’ conduct,
comes just days before Thursday’s local elections throughout the UK, which are
being viewed as a key test of Boris Johnson’s ability to survive as prime
minister after Partygate and other scandals.
Parish’s
exit now sets the stage for a second byelection battle this summer for the
Tories, as Johnson fights for his political life.
Last night
Jess Phillips, Labour’s shadow minister for domestic abuse and safeguarding,
said that it appeared that Parish “of his own admission” had committed a
criminal offence under the Indecent Displays (Control) Act of 1981.
The act
states that: “If any indecent matter is publicly displayed the person making
the display and any person causing or permitting the display to be made shall
be guilty of an offence.”
It adds
that: “Any matter which is displayed in or so as to be visible from any public
place shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to be publicly
displayed.”
Sentences
range from a fine to up to two years in prison.
Phillips,
who said the law was not widely known about and therefore not often enforced,
told the Observer: “If this law was to be applied it appears he has committed
an offence by his own admission.”
Phillips
said Labour would now call for a full review into the law’s application and how
many charges had been brought under it. She said a public information campaign
should also be launched as a matter of urgency to enable people to know that
watching porn where others could see it was already illegal, including on
public transport.
Phillips
said: “There are plenty of laws on the statute books that are meant to protect
women and girls in society, however they are not enacted. They are very rarely
enacted appropriately.
“People
don’t know they can complain about it. What we will do now is look into where
charging has and hasn’t happened [under this law], such as on transport
networks where people watch it on the bus next you.”
She added
that greater awareness of the act would not be enough, but charges needed to be
brought under it to demonstrate to people that watching pornography in public
was completely unacceptable and would lead to prosecutions.
On Friday
Parish had referred himself to the parliamentary commissioner for standards,
Kathryn Stone, for investigation, but had said he would only stand down if
found guilty. He said yesterday he changed his mind after realising the
pressure he was putting his family under and the damage he was doing to his
party.
Parish was
identified and stripped of the whip on Friday afternoon after two female
colleagues had claimed last week they had seen him looking at adult content on
his phone while sitting near them in the chamber.
Although
Parish retained the Tiverton and Honiton seat with a majority of more than
24,000 in 2019, the Liberal Democrats are now certain to pour resources into
the midterm contest there as they battle to re-establish themselves as a force
in the west country.
The Tories
are already bracing themselves for another even tougher byelection test in the
“red wall” seat of Wakefield, after Conservative MP Imran Ahmad Khan resigned
following a conviction for sexually assaulting a boy aged 15 in 2008.
Labour had
held Wakefield since the 1930s until Khan took the seat at the 2019 general
election with a majority of 3,358.
Writing in
the Observer, Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle demands a radical overhaul of the
working practices in Westminster, after a series of scandals over sexual
harassment and bullying.
Commons
staff have been pushing for an overhaul for some time. They have raised
concerns that the Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme, set up in the
wake of sexual harassment and bullying claims, remains a complicated, slow and
often intimidating process. Some 43 complaints against MPs have been
investigated by the service in the last three years. It is understood that the
number for the current year is similar to last year’s figure of 15 MPs.
Hoyle is
working to form a “Speaker’s conference” – essentially a cross-party committee
– to examine swift reforms and back an overhaul. Such a conference was last
called in 2008 to examine the representation of women, ethnic minorities and
disabled people in the Commons. The committee will hear expert evidence before
finalising the reforms. It would have to be formally approved by the government
and the Commons.
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