Daily Mail

Johnson: I’ll stick by Priti

PM declares full confidence in embattled Home Secretary as ANOTHER bullying claim emerges and inquiry looms

- By Claire Ellicott and Jason Groves

BORIS Johnson vowed to ‘ stick by’ Priti Patel over bullying allegation­s yesterday even as a fresh claim emerged that she threw a folder at an official during a row.

the Prime Minister told MPs he had full confidence in the embattled Home Secretary despite launching a Cabinet Office inquiry this week into claims that she bullied staff.

But his vote of confidence came as a Whitehall source told the Mail that Mrs Patel had thrown a folder at an official, hitting him in the face during a meeting in 2016. the fresh claim, which was denied by allies of Mrs Patel last night, dates from her time as employment minister.

a Whitehall source said: ‘She was being briefed by officials for an event and there was a page missing and she got annoyed. at the end of the briefing, she threw the folder at him and it hit him in the face.

‘it was so aggressive. She didn’t apologise. it was just like when alex Ferguson chucked the boot at Beckham.’

a spokesman for Mrs Patel said the claim was ‘categorica­lly false’.

Former work and pensions secretary iain Duncan Smith, who was Mrs Patel’s boss at the time, also denied the claim, saying: ‘if someone threw a file at you, you would report it, wouldn’t you? there wasn’t a complaint.’ But the allegation is the latest in a series of bullying claims levelled against the Home Secretary in recent days – all of which she has denied.

in a bombshell resignatio­n statement at the weekend, the Home Office’s former top civil servant Sir Philip rutnam accused Mrs Patel of ‘shouting and swearing, belittling people, making unreasonab­le and repeated demands’.

Sir Philip, who branded Mrs Patel a liar and a bully, is now suing the Government for constructi­ve dismissal. an official at the Department for Work and Pensions is reported to have received a £25,000 payout after filing a formal complaint against the department. according to legal documents seen by the BBC, the woman took an overdose of prescripti­on medicines following the alleged bullying in 2015.

Mrs Patel has also been accused of bullying her private secretary during her time as internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary. a senior official at the Department for internatio­nal Developmen­t has claimed there was a ‘ tsunami’ of allegation­s of abuse by officials in her private office.

One former senior figure in the department told the Mail yesterday she had ‘ harassed’ her private secretary to the point where he was eventually signed off sick with a stress-related condition and asked for a transfer to another department.

But, in a sign of the difficulty the Cabinet Office is likely to face in investigat­ing the claims against Mrs Patel, another former DFID official flatly denied the claim she had bullied her private secretary.

the source said: ‘Priti wanted to get a new private secretary, which is not uncommon for a new minister. it was handled a bit awkwardly but it all ended amicably. the claim she was bullying him is just not true and is being put about maliciousl­y.’

a former minister who served with Mrs Patel urged the Prime Minister to sack her.

they said: ‘there hasn’t been a single government department in which she has worked where there haven’t been complaints about her conduct, whether it was the treasury, the Department for Work and Pensions, DfiD or now the Home Office.

‘She is not fit to be a minister and it is a reflection on Boris’s judgment that he ever put her in the Home Office.’

in the Commons yesterday, the Prime Minister gave Mrs Patel his full backing.

Speaking during Prime Minister’s Questions, with Mrs Patel sat alongside him, he said: ‘the Home Secretary is doing an outstandin­g job – delivering change, putting police on the streets, cutting crime and delivering a new immigratio­n system – and i’m sticking by her.’ Labour called for an independen­t inquiry into Mrs Patel’s conduct, and said that it had received fresh allegation­s against her from officials who served with her in various government department­s. Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said that Mr Johnson had ‘no shame in defending bullying’ in his Government. But Downing Street insisted that the Cabinet Office inquiry, which will report to Mr Johnson, would be ‘robust’ and would be able to look at all allegation­s made against

Mrs Patel. it is thought that Mrs Patel will be interviewe­d by senior officials about the claims in the coming days.

Her allies have claimed that ‘dark forces’ are trying to remove her. Mr Duncan Smith said disgruntle­d officials were ‘in league’ with each other and elements of the media as part of an effort to damage the Government.

‘Some of the civil service are using Priti Patel to take on the Government,’ he said.

‘they’re using Priti to weaken Downing Street’s resolve. if Downing Street backs down, some in the civil service will say they have won, and no one will say boo to them again.

‘it’s complete nonsense from start to end. i’ve worked with her and yes, she’s tough, she’s strident. But she’s trying to get a job done.’

 ??  ?? Lawsuit: Sir Philip Rutnam
Lawsuit: Sir Philip Rutnam

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