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Second Labour MP apologises over WhatsApp comments Second Labour MP apologises over WhatsApp comments
(about 4 hours later)
Oliver Ryan has been the MP for Burnley, in Lancashire, since 2024
A second Labour MP has apologised for comments made in a WhatsApp chat, after Andrew Gwynne was sacked as a minister over messages he sent to the same group.A second Labour MP has apologised for comments made in a WhatsApp chat, after Andrew Gwynne was sacked as a minister over messages he sent to the same group.
Burnley MP Oliver Ryan said in a statement that comments he made in the group "were completely unacceptable" and he regretted "not speaking out at the time".Burnley MP Oliver Ryan said in a statement that comments he made in the group "were completely unacceptable" and he regretted "not speaking out at the time".
Fellow MP Gwynne was sacked as health minister on Saturday after the Mail on Sunday reported, external he sent a string of offensive and abusive messages in the WhatsApp group, which contained other Labour figures.Fellow MP Gwynne was sacked as health minister on Saturday after the Mail on Sunday reported, external he sent a string of offensive and abusive messages in the WhatsApp group, which contained other Labour figures.
A government source told the PA news agency that the party's chief whip would speak to Ryan "and no action is off the table".A government source told the PA news agency that the party's chief whip would speak to Ryan "and no action is off the table".
"I did not see every message, but I accept responsibility for not being more proactive in challenging what was said," Ryan added."I did not see every message, but I accept responsibility for not being more proactive in challenging what was said," Ryan added.
"I also made some comments myself which I deeply regret and would not make today and for that, I wholeheartedly apologise.""I also made some comments myself which I deeply regret and would not make today and for that, I wholeheartedly apologise."
He said he would cooperate fully with Labour's investigation, which began after Gwynne's messages were revealed. Ryan said the WhatsApp group, reportedly called Trigger Me Timbers, was created by his "MP and former employer, Andrew Gwynne".
He said he would co-operate fully with Labour's investigation, which began after Gwynne's messages were revealed.
Gwynne was suspended from the party and apologised in a statement on X for any offence caused by the "badly misjudged" comments.Gwynne was suspended from the party and apologised in a statement on X for any offence caused by the "badly misjudged" comments.
Ryan, 29, said he was a member of the WhatsApp group between 2019 and early 2022, when he was a councillor on Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council. He was elected for the first time as an MP in July. In messages seen by the Mail on Sunday, Gwynne said he hoped a 72-year-old woman would soon be dead after she wrote to her local councillor about bin collections.
The former health minister also reportedly posted sexist comments about Angela Rayner, racist remarks about Labour MP Diane Abbott, and appeared to make light of antisemitism.
Ryan's participation in the group was reported by the paper the following day.
Following Gwynne's sacking, a government spokesperson said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was "determined to uphold high standards of those in public office" and "will not hesitate to take action against any minister who fails to meet these standards".
A Labour spokesperson added: "Swift action will be taken if individuals are found to have breached the high standards expected of them as Labour Party members".
Ryan, 29, said he was a member of the WhatsApp group between 2019 and early 2022, when he was a councillor on Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council. He was elected for the first time as an MP in July last year.
"Some of the comments made in that group were completely unacceptable, and I fully condemn them," he added."Some of the comments made in that group were completely unacceptable, and I fully condemn them," he added.
"I regret not speaking out at the time, and I recognise that failing to do so was wrong.""I regret not speaking out at the time, and I recognise that failing to do so was wrong."
On Sunday, Conservative shadow cabinet office minister Alex Burghart told Sky News that he questioned whether members of the WhatsApp group called out Gwynne's remarks at the time.
"That was a big WhatsApp group with a lot of other Labour members - did any of them step in at the time? Did any of them call that out?" he said.
He added that Gwynne's message about the elderly constituent was "sort of quite a nasty attempt to do down an old person", and deemed another about someone's name sounding "too Jewish" as "sinister".