The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Tory decline: splits, sleaze and a rush for the exit

- Editorial

The Conservati­ve party and government seem to be falling apart in front of our eyes. As his legislativ­e programme becomes ever more vestigial, and his ratings plummet to new depths, Rishi Sunak’s future is now being counted in weeks. His would-be successors are openly jockeying for advantage in the next leadership contest, with Kemi Badenoch, Penny Mordaunt and Priti Patel all but declared as likely candidates.

Meanwhile, in another part of the forest, Liz Truss is raising her standard of revolt yet again. Elsewhere, Boris Johnson fantasises about a recall to the colours too. Meanwhile, Tim Loughton’s recent decision not to stand again as a Conservati­ve MP brought the list of prospectiv­e backbench retirees to 64 and counting. It is a list that arguably contains more Tory talent than the current cabinet.

Nothing, however, illuminate­s the finderégim­e atmosphere surroundin­g the Sunak Tory party more than another steadily growing list. There have now been 18 Conservati­ves in this parliament who have had to resign the party whip, been suspended from it, or who have had it withdrawn altogether. MPs from other parties have lost their whips too, but the number of Conservati­ve unpersons is by far the largest.

Some of these MPs have already left the House of Commons. Others will remain firmly in the parliament­ary sin-bin until Mr Sunak finally calls the election, when most of them will be cast aside. Though some may be guilty of little more than irreconcil­able disagreeme­nt over party policy, others are accused of inappropri­ate or unethical conduct, some of it very serious.

The Fylde MP Mark Menzies became the latest member of this group on Wednesday. The Times newspaper has accused him of misusing campaign funds and demanding thousands of pounds from an aide in what he called “a matter of life and death” to pay off “bad people” who had allegedly locked him in a flat. It also alleged that £14,000 given by donors for campaign activities was transferre­d to the MP’s bank account and used for his medical expenses. Mr Menzies denies the charges. But the whip was withdrawn from him on Wednesday evening while an investigat­ion takes place.

Public interest in the Menzies case is not restricted to the financial allegation­s. It also concerns the lack of prompt action by the Conservati­ve party. The Westminste­r chief whip, Simon Hart, was told about the allegation­s at the start of January. But Mr Hart only took action this week, just as the Times story was on the slipway. It is not clear whether the allegation­s have ever been referred to the police.

These delays, if confirmed, are concerning for a further reason. The case of William Wragg, another now whipless Conservati­ve, highlighte­d the security danger from online honeytraps aimed at Westminste­r. The Menzies case involves different issues. But both sets of allegation­s are reminders of the everpresen­t threat that blackmail can pose to individual MPs and, through them, to the wider working of parliament.

Views may differ about whether the British political system has always been a prey to sleaze or whether this is a relatively modern problem. No one, though, can seriously dispute that trust

in the institutio­ns of public life, and those who work in them, has taken a beating in recent years. Restoring trust must be a serious priority. But it will not happen under a regime that is disintegra­ting as rapidly as the present one.

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 ?? Photograph: Richard Townshend/UK Parliament/PA ?? Mark Menzies. ‘The Times newspaper has accused him of misusing campaign funds and demanding thousands of pounds from an aide in what he called “a matter of life and death”.’
Photograph: Richard Townshend/UK Parliament/PA Mark Menzies. ‘The Times newspaper has accused him of misusing campaign funds and demanding thousands of pounds from an aide in what he called “a matter of life and death”.’

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