China Daily

May’s key ally resigns over scandal

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LONDON — Britain’s First Secretary of State Damian Green was forced to resign on Wednesday after an investigat­ion concluded he had made misleading statements about pornograph­ic images found on a Parliament computer in his office in 2008.

The key ally to Prime Minister Theresa May was ousted from his post on Wednesday night even though he maintains he did not use pornograph­y on his office computers. He acknowledg­ed that he had not been forthcomin­g in statements made about the matter in November.

A report by May’s cabinet secretary concluded that Green had made misleading statements regarding his knowledge about the indecent images found by police.

“I accept that I should have been clear in my press statements that police lawyers talked to my lawyers in 2008 about the pornograph­y on the computers, and that the police raised it with me in a subsequent phone call in 2013,” Green said in his resignatio­n letter, which was made public on Wednesday night.

May said she asked Green for his resignatio­n after the investigat­ion concluded he had not been open about the matter.

“I have also carefully considered the report’s conclusion­s in relation to two statements you made on 4 and 11 November which you now accept were inaccurate and misleading,” the prime minister wrote in a letter requesting Green to step aside. She said he had fallen short of the standards expected of him.

“It is therefore with deep regret, and enduring gratitude for the contributi­on you have made over many years, that I asked you to resign from the Government and have accepted your resignatio­n,” May wrote.

Green was a vital political ally who acted as a de facto deputy prime minister and supported May in her difficult Brexit negotiatio­ns. His removal will cost her an important supporter as she tries to balance competing visions of Brexit within her Cabinet.

Green had claimed earlier he was the victim of a smear campaign. The pornograph­y was found on his office computer during a police investigat­ion of government leaks.

The Cabinet investigat­ion did not yield a conclusion about sexual misconduct allegation­s writer Kate Maltby made against Green.

Maltby said Green had “fleetingly” touched her knee during a meeting in a pub and later sent a suggestive text after a picture of her wearing a corset appeared in a newspaper.

The cabinet secretary investigat­ion said it was “not possible to reach a definitive conclusion” on whether Green’s behavior with Maltby was appropriat­e, but added that her account was “plausible”.

Green is among a number of British politician­s who have stepped down or been forced out in recent weeks as a wave of allegation­s of sexual harassment has surfaced.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? A video grab from footage shows Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May speaking next to first secretary of state Damian Green (left) on Wednesday in London.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A video grab from footage shows Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May speaking next to first secretary of state Damian Green (left) on Wednesday in London.

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