The Mail on Sunday

Sealed with a kiss: friendly texts from victim to ‘sex pest’ Green ...AFTER she reported him to Number 10

- By Glen Owen

THE row over Damian Green’s sacking erupted again last night after leaked messages sent by the woman who accused him of misconduct showed that she was sending him friendly texts just weeks before pulling the trigger on his career.

Kate Maltby’s claim that she had felt ‘ angry’ and ‘ profession­ally compromise­d’ after Mr Green touched her knee in a bar led to a Cabinet Office inquiry into the Minister, which widened into claims that he had downloaded pornograph­y on his Commons computer.

He was fired by Mrs May last week after the inquiry concluded t hat he had made misleading remarks about whether he knew about the pornograph­y allegation­s. It did not come to a conclusion about his behaviour towards Ms Maltby, 31.

The Mail on Sunday can now reveal that shortly before going public with her claims in October, Ms Maltby had sent warm messages to Mr Green – including one late at night which she signed off with an ‘x’.

The disclosure comes as a Tory MP launches an outspoken attack on his party today for ‘throwing him to the wolves’ during the Westminste­r sex harassment scandal.

Dover MP Charlie Elphicke, who had the whip suspended seven weeks ago over unspecifie­d ‘serious allegation­s’, writes on the page opposite that he has still not been told who his accuser is – or what the allegation­s are. He blames Tory Chief Whip Julian Smith– who referred the claims to the police – for the torrent of abuse he has received on social media, which has taken a ‘heavy toll’ on him.

The Green saga started two months ago when Ms Maltby claimed in a newspaper article that when she met Mr Green for a drink in a bar in Waterloo in early 2015, she had felt a ‘fleeting hand against my knee’. Her ‘embarrassm­ent’ was compounded a year later when he sent her a message inviting her for a drink after seeing a picture of her wearing a corset in a newspaper article.

According to messages studied by the Cabinet Office inquiry, in February this year Ms Maltby emailed Mr Green to say she would ‘wager a good few bottles’ that he was an unnamed Minister who had been the source of a political story.

After Mr Green responds to say that he never reveals sources, Ms Maltby wrote: ‘Ha! Hope to catch up when things calm down.’ Mr Green says: ‘They never do, so let’s fix a date soon!’ Ms Maltby replies: ‘You’re the one with a ministeria­l schedule. Send me an email – or get a minion to do it!’

When Mr Green says: ‘Will do – myself or via minion’, she concludes: ‘Great. Night night’.

The exchange came five months after Ms Maltby says she warned one of Mrs May’s No 10 aides about Mr Green’s behaviour.

The leaked messages also show that on July 13 this year, a month after Mr Green had become Mrs May’s deputy, Ms Maltby texted him at 11pm after she had attended The Spectator magazine’s champagne- fuelled summer party in Westminste­r to say: ‘Sorry not to see you at t he Speccie party. [ Names a Green official] was smooching t he room on your behalf x’. Mr Green replies: ‘That’s what he’s paid for!’

A week later, Ms Maltby responds to the news that Mr Green had been appointed to sit on 19 different Cabinet committees by writing: ‘Deeply disappoint­ed to see there are two Cabinet committees you don’t have a seat on. Lax, Mr Green!’

On Wednesday, October 4 – just three weeks before making her devastatin­g claims – she sent a message to Mr Green to wish him luck on the BBC’s Question Time ‘tonight’.

When Mr Green corrects her to say it is being filmed on the Thursday, she writes: ‘Speaking of time travel, I recently found the old school magazines. Hope this cheers you up.’ Ms Maltby is referring to the fact that when she was 16, she interviewe­d Mr Green for her school magazine.

The Cabinet Office concluded that while Ms Maltby was a ‘plausible’ witness, the ‘competing and contradict­ory accounts’ of the meetings between Mr Green and Ms Maltby meant it was not possible ‘to reach a definitive conclusion on the appropriat­eness of Mr Green’s behaviour’. In his resigna- tion statement, Mr Green said that while he deeply regretted ‘the distress caused to Kate Maltby following her article about me’, he did not ‘ recognise t he events she described in her article’. He added: ‘I clearly made her feel uncomforta­ble and for this I apologise.’

Government insiders say Mr Green would not have lost his job if he hadn’t breached the ministeria­l code by making misleading statements about what he knew about police claims that pornograph­y had been found on his office computer.

On Friday, Mrs May denied she had been alerted to any claims about Mr Green’s behaviour before Ms Maltby wrote her article in October.

It comes as friends of Brexit Secretary David Davis say he did ‘everything he could’ to save Mr Green, including setting up a ‘war room’ in his office to rebut claims made by former Scotland Yard officers about pornograph­y being found on his computer.

Mr Davis also lobbied the Prime Minister personally to not ‘give his head to the police on a plate’ – but had t o admit defeat when it emerged that Mr Green had made misleading statements about his knowledge of the police claims.

I n hi s powerful arti cl e, Mr Elphicke says that – unlike Mr Green – his fate is being left in limbo. ‘Damian Green was informed of the allegation­s against him and afforded the courtesy of a full inquiry by the Cabinet Office,’ he writes.

‘In my case, it’s now more than seven weeks since I was accused of unspecifie­d allegation­s.

‘To this day I have not been interviewe­d by the police and they have not told me what I am accused of or who my accuser is.

‘Just after 9pm at night on Friday, November 3, I was relaxing at home with my family. The phone rang and it was a journalist saying he’d heard I was having the party whip removed – did I want to make a comment?

‘My wife and I spent that weekend wondering whether I would be

LINGERIE PICTURE THAT LED PM’S ALLY TO ASK KATE MALTBY FOR A DRINK This photo of Kate Maltby in a corset in a newspaper article resulted in a tweet from Cabinet Minister Damian Green Torrent of abuse has taken ‘a heavy toll’ ‘Don’t give his head to the police on a plate’

arrested at any moment. The knock never came. And has not to this day. Seven weeks on.

‘Throwing a public figure out to t he wolves has grave conse-

quences... Meanwhile, on social media, anonymous accounts spew vitriol that Twitter refuses to take down. After all, why not when the Chief Whip – who has never been my biggest fan – has declared open season?’

Mr Green follows Sir Michael Fallon and Priti Patel in being bundled out of the Cabinet in the past two months.

While Mr Green has been close to Mrs May since university, both Sir Michael and Ms Patel have the potential to cause trouble for the Prime Minister.

Friends of Sir Michael blame his successor as Defence Secretary, former Chief Whip Gavin Williamson, of having helped to engineer his departure by ‘whis- pering in the ear’ of Mrs May and using the harassment scandal as a device to prise him out.

Sir Michael was forced out over claims of inappropri­ate behaviour towards women – including a ‘lunge’ at a journalist and ‘lewd’ remarks towards fellow Conservati­ve MP Andrea Leadsom.

One friend said: ‘He has been cast into darkness by Mrs May’s Downing Street, after complainin­g that he would get up at the crack of dawn to do the media rounds whenever there was a crisis.’ Last night, Sir Michael said: ‘I wish Gavin well.’

Ms Patel, who lost her job as Internatio­nal Developmen­t Secretary seven days later after it was revealed that she had held meetings in Israel without telling the Government, is also regarded as being ‘on leadership manoeuvres’ by No 10 – who fear that she could team up with Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove to form a ‘dream ticket’ leadership partnershi­p if the May Premiershi­p falters.

Since leaving her job, Ms Patel has taken aim at Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson – another leadership contender – over the turf war between the Foreign Office and her old department, complainin­g to friends that she no longer thinks her and Mr Johnson are ‘on the same side’.

Last night, Ms Maltby said: ‘It has never been a secret that I had a friendly relationsh­ip with Damian Green for some time before I cut off contact, and that I resumed contact with him by text after he joined the Cabinet.

‘I felt it was profession­ally necessary – and I gave the Cabinet inquiry multiple saved communicat­ions proving that I had asked the advice of several more experience­d female journalist­s before doing so.

‘It is my clear understand­ing from the Cabinet Office that direct evidence as to his behaviour in this regard has already formed the background to the Prime Minister’s decision to sack him. Your story reflects much more on him than it does on me.’

Mr Green declined to comment last night.

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