Nadine Dorries formally resigns as MP with
broadside against Rishi Sunak
Former minister accuses PM of ‘whipping public frenzy’
against her in letter sent 11 weeks after she said she would stand down
Toby Helm
and Nadeem Badshah
Sat 26 Aug
2023 21.49 BST
The Tory MP
and former minister Nadine Dorries has resigned her Commons seat and accused
Rishi Sunak of “demeaning his office” by speaking out against her.
Two-and-a-half
months after first announcing her intention to step down as MP for Mid
Bedfordshire in protest at not receiving a peerage, Dorries on Saturday accused
the prime minister of abandoning “the fundamental principles of Conservatism”,
telling him: “History will not judge you kindly.”
Dorries,
using parliamentary terminology for an MP’s resignation, added: “I shall today
inform the chancellor of my intention to take the Chiltern Hundreds, enabling
the writ to be moved on 4 September for the byelection you are so desperately
seeking to take place.”
The
Treasury confirmed it had been notified of Dorries’ intention to step down.
Her
decision opens the way for another awkward byelection for the Conservatives in
what should be an ultra-safe Tory seat. In 2019 Dorries won the seat with a
24,664 majority over Labour.
However,
Sunak’s party is still reeling from the loss to Labour of Selby and Ainsty, in
North Yorkshire, in a byelection earlier this summer. In that contest Labour
overturned a Tory majority of just over 20,000, suggesting that even the safest
seats are now vulnerable.
In a
scathing resignation letter published in the Mail on Sunday, Dorries accused
Sunak of putting her personal safety at risk by “whipping a public frenzy
against her” and disclosed that police had visited her home last week, warning
her about a threat to her security.
Dorries,
who was elected as an MP in May 2005, added: “What exactly has been done or
have you [Sunak] achieved? You hold the office of prime minister unelected,
without a single vote, not even from your own MPs.
“You have
no mandate from the people, and the government is adrift. You have squandered
the goodwill of the nation, for what?”
In further
comments directed at Sunak, she wrote: “Your actions have left some 200 or more
of my MP colleagues to face an electoral tsunami and the loss of their
livelihoods, because in your impatience to become prime minister you put your
personal ambition above the stability of the country and our economy.
“Bewildered,
we look in vain for the grand political vision for the people of this great
country to hold on to, that would make all this disruption and subsequent
inertia worthwhile, and we find absolutely nothing.”
Dorries
announced her intention to quit parliament when Johnson stood down as an MP in
early June. However, she caused confusion by refusing to resign formally, and
irritation by continuing to draw an MP’s salary. Justifying her actions, she
said she was waiting for an explanation as to why Johnson’s proposal that she
should get a peerage was blocked.
Sunak
recently criticised Dorries for failing to represent her constituents properly,
telling LBC: “I think people deserve to have an MP that represents them … It’s
just making sure your MP is engaging with you, representing you, whether that’s
speaking in parliament or being present in their constituencies doing
surgeries, answering your letters. That’s the job of an MP and all MPs should
be held to that standard.”
Asked if
that meant Dorries was failing her constituents, Sunak said: “Well, at the
moment people aren’t being properly represented.”
Frustration
with her had also been growing among Tory MPs and in her constituency, who
accused her of being absent while continuing to receive her taxpayer-funded
salary of £86,584.
The
outgoing MP, a staunch ally of Sunak’s predecessor Boris Johnson, last spoke in
the Commons more than 400 days ago and has voted only six times so far this
year.
“Dosser
Dorries” banners have been erected in nearby Flitwick where, last month, the
town’s councillors demanded the MP resign, saying she had not held a surgery in
the area since 2020.
That
meeting, at the private members’ Flitwick Club on 6 March, just four days
before Dorries became the first MP to be diagnosed with coronavirus, was the
only time the former health minister had held a surgery there, according to its
barman Paul Copperwheat.
In response
to the criticism, Dorries’ office said she no longer lived in the Mid
Bedfordshire constituency, or held in-person constituency surgeries, because of
security reasons connected to a stalker. The MP held regular Zoom-based
surgeries, it said. Asked when the last such virtual surgery took place, there
was no response.
Recently a
campaign group called for an investigation after a poll suggested more than 50%
believed her absence as an MP and failure to quit had significantly damaged
parliament’s reputation.
Tom Brake,
the director of Unlock Democracy, called for an inquiry after the Opinium
survey found 55% of people thought Dorries had caused significant damage by
failing to speak in parliament and delaying her decision to quit.
Dorries
last made a written contribution in parliament when she laid a ministerial
statement in September 2022, as Boris Johnson handed over to Liz Truss as prime
minister. She last voted in the House of Commons in April and has been absent
for most votes since last September.

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