Arab News

UK Parliament sleaze row ‘clearing out’ bad behavior

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LONDON: British Interior Minister Amber Rudd declared Sunday that a scandal over sexual harassment rocking the country’s political circles was a “watershed moment” that was “clearing out” inappropri­ate behavior.

She denied that Prime Minister Theresa May’s minority government was at risk after Michael Fallon quit as defense secretary earlier this week and as two other ministers remain under investigat­ion for misconduct. Rudd told BBC television that the end result of the claims was “clearing out Westminste­r of that sort of behavior.”

“And I think that Westminste­r afterward, including the government, will be better for it,” she said.

Fallon announced his resignatio­n on Wednesday after apologizin­g for touching a journalist’s knee in 2002.

Another journalist alleged this weekend that Fallon had “lunged” at her after a lunch in 2003. She said she reported the incident to Downing Street this week, and he resigned hours later.

May’s de facto deputy Damian Green, meanwhile, is being investigat­ed for his own alleged inappropri­ate behavior toward a journalist, which he strongly denies.

Rudd confirmed that the probe had been widened to include a newspaper report on Sunday that “extreme” pornograph­ic material had been found on his parliament­ary computer in 2008.

Green, an old university friend of May’s, has strongly denied the story in the Sunday Times and accused the police source behind it of trying to cause him political damage.

The prime minister is also due to meet with other party leaders on Monday to discuss a new parliament­ary complaints system in the wake of a wave of allegation­s, many involving MPs and junior staff or journalist­s.

On Friday, she announced a new code of conduct for her own Conservati­ve party — under which three MPs were referred for investigat­ion this weekend. Another Conservati­ve MP was suspended on Friday, while the opposition Labour party has also suspended one of its lawmakers.

A Scottish minister resigned on Saturday after admitting his behavior “might have made others uncomforta­ble,” while a Welsh minister was sacked Friday following allegation­s about his personal conduct.

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