Birmingham Post

MP Fabricant reveals ‘life partner’ is mayor Street

Conservati­ve politician’s personal revelation inTV interview

- Geraldine Scott Staff Reporter

LICHFIELD Conservati­ve MP Michael Fabricant has spoken of his close relationsh­ip with “life partner” Andy Street, the West Midlands Mayor.

Mr Fabricant revealed the pair share a property in Wales and would be spending Christmas together this year.

He said they could “depend on each other” while living separate “busy” lives.

Mr Fabricant told Gloria De Piero in an interview for GB News that he met Mr Street, a former boss of retailer John Lewis, 31 years ago at an Oxford University reunion.

The pair have often been described as close friends and when Ms De Piero asked if they were partners, Mr Fabricant said: “We’re life partners.”

He said: “We’ve got a place together in Wales because we both like walking. We go on holidays together and we’re, you know, we’re very, very close. But we lead separate lives. If we lived together all the time, I think we’d murder each other.”

He added: “There’s something special, but I’m not quite sure what it is. One of those indefinabl­e little things.”

Asked how Mr Street would answer the same question, Mr Fabricant joked: “He would cringe with embarrassm­ent. He would take the microphone off and storm off the set.”

Mr Fabricant is known for his eccentrici­ty and said being a “character” is what makes him electable.

He said people often assumed he was gay, and that the television programme First Dates had wanted to pair him with a man for a charity episode.

However, he said: “I’m bisexual, I suppose, if you’ve got to define these things.

“All the women I was with, they wanted to get married. They wanted babies. They wanted mortgages. They wanted commitment.

“I didn’t want commitment. And then I met an American guy, and then subsequent­ly I met Andy and we both lead, as I said just now, busy lives.

“We’re there for each other. But it does mean I can get on with being an MP and he can get on with being West Midlands Mayor and we’re not constantly worrying about each other and all the rest of it.”

Mr Fabricant recalled how when he became an MP and went to Westminste­r in 1992, he found “the Conservati­ve Party was very different from the Conservati­ve Party that I knew down in Brighton”.

He admitted had he not been a Tory MP himself, he might have voted for Tony Blair in 1997.

He added that the Conservati­ves were “all retired colonel types, all very, very pompous and quite sort of misogynist, homophobic, xenophobic and every other phobic you can think of ” when he first joined the Commons.

“So, I thought at the time that Tony Blair was quite refreshing,” he said. “But by then I was a Conservati­ve MP so I thought I’d better vote for myself otherwise I might lose.”

He said he did not feel “inhibited” in the Commons, despite being described as a “character”.

“When I first got into the House of Commons, I felt very inhibited. I tried to hold myself back all the time.”

People said to him, “Michael, you’ve got great personalit­y, be yourself ’’.

“And I found it much easier in the Parliament­ary party from ’97 onwards; we were a small band of brothers on the Opposition benches. But actually, it was great fun and people, I think, respected the fact that I was electable.”

He added: “Being a character doesn’t... it’s not something I force. It’s just me.”

 ?? ?? > Michael Fabricant MP
> Michael Fabricant MP
 ?? ?? > Andy Street
> Andy Street

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