Western Mail

First May knew of Green claims ‘was what I read’

- Shaun Connolly and Gavin Cordon newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

Theresa May has said the first she knew about allegation­s of inappropri­ate conduct by former Cabinet minister Damian Green was when she read about them in the press.

Conservati­ve activist Kate Maltby has said she alerted Downing Street last year to Barry-born Mr Green’s “pattern of behaviour”.

However, speaking to reporters during a visit to British troops in Cyprus, the Prime Minister said she had not been informed of the claims.

“The first I learned of these allegation­s was when Kate Maltby wrote about them in The Times,” she said.

Ms Maltby, who is three decades younger than Mr Green, claimed he “fleetingly” touched her knee during a meeting in a pub in 2015, and a year later sent her a “suggestive” text message after she was pictured wearing a corset in a newspaper.

The allegation­s, which Mr Green says he does not recognise, triggered a Cabinet Office probe into his conduct.

That led to Mrs May sacking her de facto deputy after he made “misleading” statements about allegation­s that police found pornograph­y on computers in his parliament­ary office in 2008.

The Prime Minister said: “I recognise that Kate Maltby was obviously extremely distressed by what happened. Damian Green has recognised that and he has apologised. I think that is absolutely the right thing to do.”

The Daily Telegraph reported that Ms Maltby told a Downing Street aide about her claims against Mr Green in September 2016, and she was informed it was part of a pattern of behaviour, and that “the Prime Minister knows”.

Ms Maltby told the newspaper: “I would never, never have told my story about Damian Green if I did not believe I was exposing a pattern of behaviour of which I thought the Prime Minister was aware.”

Ms Matlby told the BBC: “The reason that I didn’t tell many people about the first encounter, the encounter which I felt the political mentorship, or even a job in the Conservati­ve Party, was being offered at the same time as a sexual suggestion. The reason I didn’t tell many people then, except my parents, is that I wondered if it was a one-off... and, eventually, I spoke to a very senior and long-serving aide of Theresa May.”

Asked if she had told the Cabinet Office investigat­ion, headed by senior civil servant Sue Gray, that Downing Street was aware “there was an issue” with Mr Green’s behaviour towards women, Ms Maltby said: “I gave evidence to the inquiry, as soon as I sat down with Sue Gray, that, to the best of my knowledge, Downing Street was aware.”

When Mr Green left office on Wednesday he said he did not recognise Ms Maltby’s version of events.

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