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Gavin Williamson ordered to apologise for bullying chief whip after he wasn’t invited to Queen’s funeral

A watchdog has ordered Gavin Williamson to formally apologise to MPs for bullying a colleague who did not allocate him tickets to the late Queen’s funeral.

The Independent Expert Panel found that Sir Gavin had breached rules and that his conduct towards former chief whip Wendy Morton amounted to an “abuse of power”, which went “beyond vigorous complaint or political disagreement”.

Sir Gavin had sent a series of expletive-laden text messages to the chief whip in September 2022 in the run-up to the Queen’s funeral, in part complaining that he was not invited to the ceremony. The messages were leaked to the media and Ms Morton lodged a complaint in November 2022.

The former education secretary resigned from the government frontbench in light of the allegations, whose characterisation he rejected.

The panel found that the texts amounted to “offensive and intimidating behaviour” and a “threat to lever his power and authority as a former chief whip to undermine Ms Morton personally”.

The exchange concluded with Sir Gavin, angry about not being invited to the Queen’s funeral, telling the chief whip: “Well, let’s see how many more times you f*** us all over. There is a price for everything.”

The panel has said Sir Gavin should make a personal statement in the House of Commons and undergo “appropriate behaviour training” to increase his awareness of the impact of bullying on others.

Sir Gavin, who was handed his knighthood by Boris Johnson in March 2022, has accepted the panel’s ruling.

In a statement released on Monday, the panel said: “The sub-panel considering the case found that Sir Gavin had bullied Wendy Morton MP in September 2022 when she was government chief whip during an exchange of text messages relating to his not being allocated tickets to the funeral of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Ms Morton made a complaint about these messages to the Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme (ICGS) in November 2022.

“The IEP sub-panel considering the case agreed with the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards that the texts were “offensive and intimidating behaviour”. It concluded that Sir Gavin’s conduct was an abuse of power, finding that it had gone beyond vigorous complaint or political disagreement to a threat to lever his power and authority as a former chief whip to undermine Ms Morton personally.

“The sub-panel determined, having considered the wishes of the complainant, that the appropriate sanction was to require Sir Gavin to make an unreserved apology by way of a personal statement in the House, and to undertake appropriate behaviour training. Sir Gavin accepted this decision.”


Source: UK Politics - www.independent.co.uk


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