The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

A parliament committed to rooting out abusers wouldn’t be stuffed full of them

- Kirsty Strickland

Last week, a Conservati­ve MP was arrested on suspicion of rape and sexual assault. The allegation­s span a period of seven years and the unnamed MP was taken into custody, before being released on bail until a date in June, pending further inquiries.

This shocking story is the latest in a series of sexual misconduct allegation­s that have rocked Westminste­r in recent months.

On Monday, former Conservati­ve MP Imran Ahmad Khan was sentenced to 18 months in jail for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old boy in 2008.

He quit as an MP after he was convicted in April and a by-election will be held next month to fill the seat he vacated.

On the same day, there will also be a by-election in Tiverton and Honiton, where Neil Parish resigned as an MP after admitting to watching pornograph­y in the House of Commons.

It’s no wonder so many people are asking what on earth is going on – and going wrong – at Westminste­r.

It seems barely a week goes by without another grotesque incident being reported in the newspapers.

Before I sat down to write this column, I thought I’d better check for any new developmen­ts that had occurred over the weekend, while I was happily tuned out from the news and the grubby world of politics.

And it’s a good job I did, because I spotted one I’d missed.

The Sunday Mirror ran an exclusive story about a number of rumours swirling around Westminste­r that a senior Conservati­ve MP plied four victims with date-rape drugs.

A source told the paper the name of the alleged attacker was being spoken about “openly’’ among Conservati­ve MPs in the House of Commons.

This latest batch of stories is being erroneousl­y referred to as a “sleaze’’ scandal.

But to call it that minimises the horror of these individual allegation­s and the alleged victims in each case.

It takes immense courage to report sexual violence and misconduct.

Every victim who does so knows the odds are stacked against them.

Add in the power dynamics and unique workplace practices of politics and you might begin to understand how much mental strength it takes for victims to speak out about what they’ve gone through.

Which is why my gut twists in anger every time I see allegation­s of this sort being given the oh-so-witty title of “Pestminste­r’’.

These aren’t tawdry tabloid tales involving consensual affairs or acts. They are a visible symptom of a wider rot that has set in across society.

Men’s violence against women (and in many cases, against other men) is endemic.

As sexual offences rise year-on-year, conviction rates remain worryingly low.

While this latest spate of allegation­s involve mainly Conservati­ve MPs, only a partisan fool would write this off as a uniquely Tory problem.

However, it’s true that the party has serious questions to answer about its vetting procedures and how it deals with complaints against its members.

In the case of the unnamed Conservati­ve MP arrested on suspicion of rape and sexual assault last week, the response has been woeful.

The Conservati­ve Party has thus far refused to suspend the accused.

Instead, he has been merely asked to stay away from the parliament­ary estate while the police investigat­ion is ongoing.

This leaves a man who is accused of serious sexual offences spanning seven years free to conduct face-to-face constituen­cy surgeries with members of the public, who will have no idea what their MP has been accused of.

These are clear safeguardi­ng issues here, but male violence isn’t unique to the Conservati­ve Party.

No political party has a clean record when it comes to preventing predatory men from joining their ranks.

What sort of example does this set the rest of society?

We see the devastatin­g impact of men’s violence across every corner of the UK, in every social class, every profession and every demographi­c of people.

Male violence is a societal problem and one that the UK Government seems illequippe­d to deal with.

We’ve seen the usual patterns of minimisati­on and victim-blaming in these recent examples of sexual violence and harassment in the world of politics.

But when allegation­s hit, political parties must resist that partisan urge to turn inwards in a bid to protect their own members or reputation.

In recent weeks we’ve heard depressing­ly familiar tales of female staffers warning one another about predatory MPs, and certain politician­s who have been assigned minders to keep them out of trouble when the booze starts flowing.

Imagine if parties spent as much time on prevention as they did on mitigation.

A zero-tolerance policy towards sexual harassment and violence in a political party wouldn’t look like this.

A parliament that was committed to rooting out abusers wouldn’t find itself stuffed full of them.

It’s a question of accountabi­lity. How can we trust our politician­s to find an antidote for this poison in wider society when they can’t even get their own house in order?

It takes immense courage to report sexual violence

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 ?? ?? SCANDAL: Neil Parish quit as an MP after admitting watching pornograph­y in the House of Commons.
SCANDAL: Neil Parish quit as an MP after admitting watching pornograph­y in the House of Commons.

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