Ex-ministers campaigned to undermine Johnson
Partygate inquiry, says report
Privileges committee says seven Tory MPs and three
peers risked discrediting system of checks and balances in parliament
Aubrey
Allegretti Senior political correspondent
@breeallegretti
Thu 29 Jun
2023 10.39 BST
Former cabinet
ministers and allies of Boris Johnson have been accused of launching an
“unprecedented and coordinated” campaign to undermine the inquiry into whether
he misled parliament over Partygate.
The finding
came in a new report by the privileges committee, which posed a fresh problem
for Rishi Sunak as it recommended toughening up the rules on interference in
such inquiries and condemned the behaviour of former ministers.
Seven Tory
MPs and three peers – including a serving government minister – were named and
told their behaviour risked discrediting a fundamental arm of the system of
checks and balances in parliament.
The former
cabinet ministers Nadine Dorries, Priti Patel and Jacob Rees-Mogg were named,
as were other former frontbenchers Brendan Clarke-Smith, Mark Jenkinson, Andrea
Jenkyns and Michael Fabricant.
Zac
Goldsmith, a Foreign Office minister, and two other Tory peers – Lord Cruddas
and Lord Greenhalgh – were similarly criticised.
Earlier
this month, the privileges committee said it would write a special report on
the issues it encountered during its 14-month inquiry into Johnson’s Partygate
denials. In its ruling, the committee found he had committed five contempts of
parliament.
Its
follow-up report, published on Thursday, said some senior Tories had waged a
campaign across newspapers, radio and social media to discredit the committee’s
work and the seven MPs that serve on the cross-party group.
They all
tried to “undermine procedures of the House of Commons”, and two MPs in
particular – Dorries and Rees-Mogg – were said to have mounted “the most
vociferous attacks … from the platform of their own hosted TV shows” on TalkTV
and GB News respectively.
“Attacks by
experienced members are all the more concerning as they would have known that
during the course of an investigation it was not possible for the privileges
committee to respond to the attacks,” the report said.
The four
Tory members of the committee were particularly targeted, the committee said.
It noted: “This had the clear intention to drive those members off the
committee and so to frustrate the intention of the house that the inquiry
should be carried out, or to prevent the inquiry coming to a conclusion which
the critics did not want.
“It had
significant personal impact on individual members and raised significant
security concerns.”
If such
abuse continued in future, no MPs would want to serve on the committee that
investigates the most serious breaches of parliamentary rules, the report
continued. “If that happens … the house might feel compelled to cede to an
external authority the responsibility for protection of its rights and
privileges.”
Lord
Cruddas and Lord Greenhalgh were found to have been among more than 600 people
who emailed Tory members of the committee using a template devised by the
Conservative Post website.
An article
on the website inviting people to lobby the committee said that all four Tories
should “step down” immediately to send a “strong message that we will not
tolerate politically motivated attacks against our party”.
Thangam
Debbonaire, the shadow leader of the Commons, told Sky News on Thursday that
privileges committee members had been put under “intolerable pressure” from
“atrocious comments” by fellow MPs.
Examples of
such behaviour cited by the privileges committee included a tweet from Dorries
calling it a “kangaroo court” that had “changed the rules” to suit its own
narrative, and Rees-Mogg, who said it “makes kangaroo courts look respectable”
and was a “political committee against Boris Johnson”.
Several of
those named in the report hit back.
Clarke-Smith,
who was appointed as an education minister in the overhauled government Johnson
led after a series of mass resignations last July, said that he had never
referred explicitly to the committee in his criticisms.
The tweet
cited by Clarke-Smith on 9 June said Johnson quitting as an MP and partly
leaking the results of the report on him was “the end result of a parliamentary
witch-hunt which would put a banana republic to shame”.
In his
defence, Clarke-Smith said he was “shocked and disappointed to be named in this
new report” and said it raised “serious questions about free speech in a
democratic society”.
Mark
Jenkinson, a former whip, also said he had never referred to the committee
before its final report was published. He said the tweet referenced by the
committee, about a “witch-hunt”, also on 9 June, was about “the media”.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário