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Trade minister Conor Burns resigns over 'veiled threats' in letter | Trade minister Conor Burns resigns over 'veiled threats' in letter |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Conor Burns has resigned as a trade minister after a report found he used his position as an MP to intimidate a member of the public. | Conor Burns has resigned as a trade minister after a report found he used his position as an MP to intimidate a member of the public. |
The Commons standards watchdog said he made "veiled threats" to use parliamentary privilege to "further his family's interests" in a financial dispute involving his father. | |
It had called for him to be suspended from Parliament for seven days. | |
Mr Burns said he accepted the sanction "unreservedly and without rancour". | |
In a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson after his resignation, he said the recommendation for a suspension made his decision to quit his post "inevitable". | |
In February, Mr Burns wrote to a member of the public connected to a company with whom his father was in dispute over the repayment of a loan. | |
He had written: "I am acutely aware that my role in the public eye could well attract interest especially if I were to use parliamentary privilege to raise the case." | |
Parliamentary privilege protects MPs from being sued for defamation for speeches made in Parliament. | Parliamentary privilege protects MPs from being sued for defamation for speeches made in Parliament. |
The Committee on Standards concluded Mr Burns had tried to intimidate the member of the public, and it was an abuse of his position as an MP which required a "sanction more severe than apology". | The Committee on Standards concluded Mr Burns had tried to intimidate the member of the public, and it was an abuse of his position as an MP which required a "sanction more severe than apology". |
It added that the dispute related purely to "private family interests" and had "no connection" with Mr Burns's duties as a Member of Parliament. | |
Apologising to the committee in March, the Conservative MP for Bournemouth West said he should not have written to the member of the public "in the terms I did" using Commons-headed notepaper. | Apologising to the committee in March, the Conservative MP for Bournemouth West said he should not have written to the member of the public "in the terms I did" using Commons-headed notepaper. |
'Sense of anger' | 'Sense of anger' |
He said he had been motivated by a desire to resolve the "long-running" dispute, which he said had a "significant" impact on his father's health. | He said he had been motivated by a desire to resolve the "long-running" dispute, which he said had a "significant" impact on his father's health. |
But in its report, the committee accused Mr Burns of being "driven by a sense of anger which, in our view, has affected his judgement in this matter". | But in its report, the committee accused Mr Burns of being "driven by a sense of anger which, in our view, has affected his judgement in this matter". |
First elected to Parliament in 2010, Mr Burns was made a trade minister by Boris Johnson shortly after the prime minister entered Downing Street in July last year. | |
He was a campaigner for Brexit during the EU referendum in 2016 and was a close friend of former Conservative Prime Minister Lady Thatcher, in her final years. | He was a campaigner for Brexit during the EU referendum in 2016 and was a close friend of former Conservative Prime Minister Lady Thatcher, in her final years. |
Writing to Mr Burns after his resignation, Mr Johnson thanked him for his "unstinting loyalty over recent years" and said he would "continue to add much from the backbenches". | |
Another apology ordered | Another apology ordered |
Separately, another trade minister, Greg Hands, has been ordered to apologise to MPs for sending a Commons-headed letter to around 7,000 constituents in April 2019. | Separately, another trade minister, Greg Hands, has been ordered to apologise to MPs for sending a Commons-headed letter to around 7,000 constituents in April 2019. |
The standards committee said the mailshot had breached rules which say MPs should not use Parliamentary stationery to their political advantage. | The standards committee said the mailshot had breached rules which say MPs should not use Parliamentary stationery to their political advantage. |
It concluded that the letter, on topics including policing and transport, was "unlikely" to have been sent without regard to its "political impact on potential voters". | It concluded that the letter, on topics including policing and transport, was "unlikely" to have been sent without regard to its "political impact on potential voters". |
It also accused the Conservative MP for Chelsea and Fulham of dragging the process out until after the 2019 general election, after initially offering to resolve the case in October. | It also accused the Conservative MP for Chelsea and Fulham of dragging the process out until after the 2019 general election, after initially offering to resolve the case in October. |