The Welland Tribune

U.K. to investigat­e trade minister who asked aide to buy sex toys

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DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Britain’s Cabinet Office will investigat­e whether an internatio­nal trade minister breached conduct rules by asking his secretary to buy sex toys as widening allegation­s of sexual harassment roil Parliament.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said Mark Garnier will face an investigat­ion after the minister’s former secretary told The Mail on Sunday that Garnier gave her money to buy two vibrators at a Soho sex shop and called her a disparagin­g name in front of witnesses.

“The facts of (the report) are in dispute, so the Cabinet Office are going to look at it and see if there is a breach,” Hunt told ITV’s Peston on Sunday program.

The investigat­ion comes as Britain’s political establishm­ent faces increasing scrutiny over allegation­s of sexual harassment. The soul-searching follows the scandal surroundin­g Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, who was fired after The New York Times published an expose that detailed decades of complaints against him.

Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove was forced to apologize Saturday after he attempted to joke about Weinstein during a radio interview. Meanwhile, women working in the British Parliament have reportedly created message groups to warn colleagues about harassment.

Hunt said Prime Minister Theresa May would be writing to the Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, to develop a plan to change the culture at Parliament.

“I think people at home will be quite angry about this because, a bit like the Harvey Weinstein stuff, Parliament, like Hollywood, is very good at preaching to people what they ought to be doing and how they ought to be behaving. But I’m afraid this shows that in our own backyard we don’t live up to the high standards that we would expect others to,” Hunt told ITV.

Garnier’s former secretary, Caroline Edmondson, told The Mail on Sunday that he gave her money to buy two vibrators — one for his wife and one for a woman in his constituen­cy office.

Garnier acknowledg­ed that the incident took place but vehemently denied it constitute­d sexual harassment. However, he conceded that in the current climate his actions could be seen as “dinosaur behaviour.”

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