Daily Mail

The PM has far more integrity than his seatbelt critic, Cardinal of Cant, Chris Bryant

- THE DOMINIC LAWSON COLUMN

When you heard that Rishi Sunak had been caught out not wearing a seatbelt in the back seat of the prime ministeria­l limo, did you think this demonstrat­ed that he’d failed to live up to his promise to bring ‘honesty and integrity’ to government? Did anyone?

Chris Bryant, the Labour chair of the Commons Committee on Standards, did. Making exactly that claim of lack of integrity, Bryant said the PM had been ‘fined again for breaking the law’ — Sunak had been penalised earlier for a technical breach of the Covid social distancing rules, in Downing Street while Chancellor — and should no longer be in office.

Bryant appears a stern moralist, at least as far as Conservati­ves are concerned. he has a preacher tone to his denunciati­ons, which is unsurprisi­ng: Bryant was ordained a priest in the Church of england in 1987. he left the Church’s employ four years later, having found it impossible to reconcile his vocation with being gay, but remains an active member of the establishe­d Church.

Shrug

Which leads me to suggest: let he who has never failed to wear his seatbelt in the back of his car cast the first stone. This is not to impute hypocrisy to Bryant. I am sure he would never fail to buckle up.

But it didn’t take long (the same day, in fact, as the Lancashire Police fined the Prime Minister £100) for social media to produce photograph­s of Keir Starmer, Jeremy Corbyn and ed Miliband, the last three Labour leaders, sitting in the back of what appeared to be cabs in motion, not wearing their seatbelts.

And in 2007 — 16 years after the law was passed which compelled passengers in the back of a car to ‘belt up’ — the then PM Tony Blair was interviewe­d for the Guardian while on the move in his chauffeur-driven Land Rover. his interviewe­r wrote: ‘now I notice that the PM wears no seatbelt. When I tenderly point this out to him, he gives an unembarras­sed shrug.’

So not only did Tony Blair take this country into a Middle eastern war on what turned out to be false pretences, he didn’t wear his seatbelt as a passenger on — well, who knows how many occasions? I don’t recall Bryant making a stink when the Guardian revealed Blair’s insouciant attitude to The Motor Vehicles (Wearing of Seat Belts in Rear Seats by Adults) Regulation­s 1991.

Still, he is not making up this charge against Sunak. It is true, however trivial. But Bryant has a record of making false accusation­s against political opponents.

In 2018, under parliament­ary privilege, he made the claim that a new Zealand billionair­e, Christophe­r Chandler, was a ‘money launderer’. This would be a serious crime. But it was completely untrue, and there was no evidence Bryant could bring to support the allegation.

Chandler, a philanthro­pist who has funded such campaigns as combatting human traffickin­g and getting child refugees into schools, in more than 100 countries, eventually (after four years) got Bryant to concede that his accusation ‘had been disproved’, and made the MP pay £1,000 to charity in recompense.

What motivated Bryant? Well, he was a passionate opponent of Brexit, one of those determined to thwart it in Parliament, despite the referendum result; and Chandler had set up a British think-tank, the Legatum Institute, which was pro-Brexit.

Chandler argued that Bryant (not alone) had sought ‘to make me an emblem of Brexit, and then, as with all others they perceive as enemies, discredit me in their quest to reverse the decision of the British public’. More recently, Bryant insisted that he had witnessed a Tory MP, Alexander Stafford, being ‘physically manhandled’ by party whips during a highly contentiou­s vote on ‘fracking’. This was quite an accusation, and not surprising­ly, the Speaker of the house, Lindsay hoyle, ordered an investigat­ion. It turned out to be untrue.

Sir Lindsay told MPs: ‘ There is no evidence of any bullying … while some thought that physical contact was being used to force a member into the lobby, the member concerned said very clearly that this did not happen. Those who had the clearest views of the incident confirmed this.’

Yet, just as in his false allegation­s against that Kiwi philanthro­pist, Bryant refused to apologise, even when proven to be wrong. I don’t question Bryant’s belief in the accusation­s he was making (however unjustifia­bly), as he will surely be aware of the ninth Commandmen­t: ‘Thou shalt not bear false witness.’

Porcine

Anyway, this is the man whose job is to promote the highest standards of behaviour within Parliament. Interviewe­d in 2021 about his role as chair of the Standards Committee, Bryant said: ‘I hate the idea that people are getting that all MPs are on the take or have their snouts in the trough.’

Perhaps they would have been less likely to have got such an idea had not many MPs been exposed for porcine behaviour over their parliament­ary expenses.

For example: a certain Chris Bryant, who in 2015 was revealed in a Channel 4 investigat­ion to have claimed more than £35,000 in expenses in 2012-2014 to pay the rent for somewhere to rest his weary head in London ... despite owning a twobedroom penthouse in the capital, which he was letting out for £3,000 a month.

Another Commons veteran who knows Bryant well — and regards him as much more capable than many colleagues who attained high office — told me: ‘he must kick himself for not staying in the Church. he could well have risen to Canterbury. Instead, he is just raddled with acid, the Cardinal of Cant, the Archbishop of Rancour-bury.’

I’d say that Rishi Sunak has more integrity than this most sanctimoni­ous critic.

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