Revealed: The ‘minders’ tasked with keeping
Britain’s drunk or misbehaving MPs in line
Revelations about Chris Pincher have exposed a darker
side to Westminster culture.
BY ESTHER
WEBBER
July 2,
2022 7:00 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/minder-task-britain-drunk-misbehaving-mp/
LONDON —
There’s no doubt politicians need careful scrutiny.
But should
elected officials really need specially-assigned “minders” to prevent their
drunken misbehavior in bars and clubs?
That’s one
of the questions gripping Westminster this weekend as the Conservative Party
descends into yet another sex scandal following the alcohol-fueled alleged
misdemeanors of senior MP Chris Pincher.
It follows
a string of recent scandals including the resignations of fellow Tory MPs Neil
Parish, for watching pornography in the House of Commons, and Imran Ahmad Khan,
who was jailed for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old boy.
Pincher
resigned as the government’s deputy chief whip Thursday after the Sun newspaper
alleged he had drunkenly groped two men at a private members’ club. In a
resignation letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Pincher admitted to having
“drank far too much” and “embarrassed myself and other people” on a chaotic
night out in central London.
MP Chris
Pincher resigned as the government’s deputy chief whip on Thursday | U.K.
Parliament
Claims made
to POLITICO back in May — that a member of the government had been assigned an
informal “minder” to ensure he left events without drinking too much and
getting into trouble — resurfaced in the wake of his resignation.
Pincher did
not respond to a request for comment on the allegation that he was indeed the
MP in question, and a senior party official said they were not aware of the
claim.
But
multiple current and former MPs confirmed the practice of “minding” problematic
MPs is widespread in Westminster, and stretches beyond just a single politician
or single political party.
Generally —
but not exclusively — the task of minding is assigned to members of the the
whips’ office. One former Conservative MP said the current chief whip, Chris
Heaton-Harris, had in the past been the person to “look after” Pincher,
although a senior party official insisted this was “completely not true.”
‘Whipping-in’
The whips’
primary responsibility is to ensure the government’s legislative business
passes through parliament, but they also act as an informal human resources
service for their party, responsible for enforcing standards of conduct among
fellow MPs.
The term
dates back to the 18th century when it was known as “whipping-in,” a reference
to the assistant in a fox hunt, whose job it is to stop hounds straying from
the pack.
Sometimes
known as the “dark arts,” whipping is notoriously secretive. While the job was
once synonymous with the bully-boy tactics traditionally used to ensure MPs toe
the party line, modern-day office-holders insist their role is now largely
pastoral.
Yet several
current and former whips confirmed they were also given an informal
responsibility to watch over MPs deemed at risk of bad behavior, typically in
parliament’s warren of late-night restaurants and bars.
“When we
were there for late-night votes, it would be quite common to go back into the
whips’ office and for someone to say, ‘have you seen the state of ‘X’?’” said
one ex-minister.
A whip
would then go and speak to the MP in question, the former minister said, in
order to underline that they were being watched, and to distract them from the
people with whom they had been drinking.
Two other
long-serving Conservative MPs were constantly “minded” by a network of whips
because of obvious alcohol and anger issues, three colleagues said.
MPs are
particularly closely supervised at their parties’ annual conferences — four- or
five-day political galas staged outside of London in different cities around
the U.K., and tending to center on late-night, booze-fuelled events.
On the
look-out
All the
major political parties aim to have at least one whip on duty in the main
conference bar each night, on the look-out for MPs either misbehaving or at
risk of doing so.
One former
government whip used to stand at the hotel bar with the same glass of wine for
an entire evening, a party activist recalled, so that other MPs coming and
going would believe he was drinking along with them.
Problematic
drinking and associated behavior is seen as a particular issue among MPs who do
not have a network of family support around them, and spend much of their free
time in Westminster’s bars.
The issue
is far from confined to just the Conservative Party.
In
February, the MP Neil Coyle was suspended from the Labour Party after a drunken
incident in a Commons bar. Last month, SNP Chief Whip Patrick Grady resigned
after sexually harassing a junior member of his party in 2016. He said
“excessive consumption of alcohol” had been a factor.
“Being an
MP can be a very lonely job,” said one ex-Labour MP. “People will try and find
solace in different things. You are in a weird situation, you’re isolated and
you rely on each other to make sure that you don’t do anything stupid.”
But other
MPs reject the talk of a “culture” which encourages inappropriate behavior.
“To suggest
it’s a problem of a drinking culture and late nights is bullshit,” said shadow
victims minister Jess Phillips. “Plenty of nurses work late nights, and aren’t
watching porn on the wards.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário