The Mail on Sunday

TORY WHIP ‘ DESTROYED FILE’ ON SEX PROBE MP

Astonishin­g cover-up claim as MP denies he groped aide and insists: I was with my mother

- By Simon Walters and Glen Owen

THERESA MAY’S Government was last night accused of trying to cover up allegation­s that a Tory MP fondled a female aide’s breasts after they drank champagne.

A Tory Whip is said to have told the MP, Charlie Elphicke, that the Party had destroyed the official record of the complaint.

The woman withdrew her accusation­s of sexual harassment after she was paid wages she said she was owed, and Mr Elphicke was told at a meeting attended by current Chief Whip Julian Smith and a fellow Whip that the documents had been ‘destroyed’. It was the second Whip who made the alleged remark.

However, months later, Mr Smith, newly promoted to the

Cabinet, suspended Mr Elphicke and reported him to police following a separate claim of rape against the Dover MP.

But when police interviewe­d the politician last month, they made no mention of rape. Instead, they asked about the alleged breast fondling and a claim by a third woman that he ‘lunged’ at her.

Mr Elphicke denies the claims and has not been arrested. Friends say he had been ‘badly treated’ by Mr Smith. ‘Julian is trying to pro- tect himself and Charlie’s reputation has been trashed,’ said one.

Senior Tory MP Bob Stewart said: ‘It is absolutely appalling that Charlie has lost the whip for nearly six months. This matter should have been resolved long ago.’

But one of Mr Smith’s allies said: ‘Once there had been a rape allegation, he had to report it to police. It is not true he tried to cover up any complaint. He has acted with complete integrity.’

Mr Smith last night vehemently denied any wrongdoing.

A source close to the Chief Whip said: ‘Julian did not say he would destroy any files and was not in charge of the case. No files were destroyed.’

However, the disclosure­s are likely to focus attention on how the Tories initially handled the first complaint.

The Mail on Sunday can today reveal what police told married father-of-two Mr Elphicke, when they interviewe­d him last week.

The first allegation came from a former female employee who cl ai med he had f ondled her breasts after they drank cham- pagne in his office one evening in the spring of 2016. She also claimed he touched her leg after he gave her a lift to his constituen­cy.

Mr Elphicke denied fondling the woman’s breasts and said he spent that evening having supper with his mother – and had emails to prove it. He admitted having champagne with her in his office on another day in spring, but again denied groping her.

The second complaint came from a female lobbyist who claimed he had ‘ lunged’ at her in a Commons lift three years ago after they had drinks in Parliament’s Pugin Room.

The 47-year-old MP again denied the allegation and said the way the woman stayed in touch with him after the alleged incident, signing off at least one text message with a friendly ‘X’, undermined her claim.

Mrs May was dragged into the controvers­y after it emerged that Mr Smith told Mr Elphicke the decision t o suspend him in November was taken with her full support. At t he t i me, Westminste­r was engulfed in multiple claims of sexual harassment and bullying by MPs.

Michael Fallon had to resign as Defence Secretary after it emerged that years earlier he had tried to kiss a female journalist and t ouched t he knee of another.

In the subsequent reshuffle, Mr Smith was promoted to Chief Whip. Within 24 hours he suspended the whip from Mr Elphicke, s a yi ng ‘ s e r i o us allegation­s’ against him had been given to police. Furious Mr Elphicke denied it and accused Downing Street of tipping off the BBC before informing him.

At the time, it was said Mr Smith reported Mr Elphicke to police as a result of allegation­s the party had received a year earlier, but initially decided not to act.

This newspaper was told yesterday by senior sources that in fact, Mr Smith reported Mr Elphicke to police because he had been informed of a rape claim.

However, when Mr Elphicke, who has always denied any wrongdoing, was interviewe­d by police on March 12, no mention was made of rape. Instead, officers raised the two other allegation­s.

Mr Elphicke had first been challenged over the ‘fondling’ incident nine moths after it was alleged to have happened.

At that time he was summoned t o a meeting with t he t wo Whips, including Mr Smith, where he was told the woman had accused him of sexual misconduct and failure to pay her wages in full.

Mr Elphicke said the allegation­s were ‘b******s’ and denied failing to

MP ‘has alibi’ for night of alleged breast fondling

pay her, saying the payment was ‘ being processed’. Shortly afterwards, Mr Elphicke was told the payment had gone through, the woman was withdrawin­g her complaint and the relevant files had been ‘destroyed’. Mr Elphicke’s friends also challenge t he woman’s claim that he touched her leg while driving her to his constituen­cy after the alleged ‘fondling’ incident. ‘ Much later in the day of the

alleged leg touching, he dropped her off at a station so she could get the train home and she never mentioned it then or afterwards,’ said one.

The ‘lunge’ complaint by a lobbyist surfaced two days after Mr Elphicke was suspended by Mr Smith. Police told the MP that the woman claimed he had ‘put his arm around her and leaned in to kiss her’ in a Commons lift in May 2015 after they had drinks in Parliament’s Pugin Room.

Mr Elphicke denied it and said the woman’s claim was undermined by the fact that in the intervenin­g period she had stayed in touch and regularly asked him out to drinks and dinner. He showed police one text message which she signed off with a friendly ‘X.’

The MP had first met the lobbyist as part of his work for the Commons Treasury Select Committee. They had also discussed the possibilit­y of her working for him as a press officer.

That became impractica­l after the 2015 Election, when Mr Elphicke became a Whip – by custom, office holders do not speak in public. He invited her to the Pugin Room to break the news to her over a drink.

Afterwards, he escorted her to the Commons exit via a lift.

The MP told police they retained cordial relations for the next two and half years – until she com- plained to Tory HQ two days after his suspension in November 2017.

Mr Elphicke declined to comment last night and Downing Street said: ‘We cannot comment on an ongoing police inquiry.’

A spokesman for Mr Smith said he ‘ robustly denied’ referring allegation­s against Mr Elphicke to police ‘in an effort to support suspension of the whip’ or that he knew of some allegation­s ‘some time before they were referred to the police’.

 ??  ?? ‘PROTECTING HIMSELF’: Chief Whip Julian Smith
‘PROTECTING HIMSELF’: Chief Whip Julian Smith

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