The Scotsman

Vaz steps down from Commons committee

● MP resigns to preserve the integrity of home affairs select committee

- By ANDREW WOODCOCK

Veteran Labour MP Keith Vaz yesterday stood down from the home affairs committee after being embroiled in an alleged rent boy scandal.

Mr Vaz, who chaired the influentia­l commons committee, said it was important that its work could be conducted “without any distractio­ns whatsoever”.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the MP’S future on the party’s National Executive Committee would be discussed when it next meets.

Keith Vaz is to quit as head of one of the most influentia­l House of Commons committees after he was embroiled in rent boy revelation­s.

Announcing his resignatio­n yesterday, the Labour MP said: “Those who hold others to account must themselves be accountabl­e.”

Mr Vaz’s departure as chairman of the Home Affairs Committee comes days after reports emerged claiming that he paid two male escorts he met at a flat he owns near his family home in north London.

The 59-year-old Leicester East MP has said he has referred the allegation­s to his solicitor.

His chairmansh­ip of the committee has come under intense scrutiny and in a statement Mr Vaz confirmed he would be standing down.

He said: “It is in the best interest of the Home Affairs Select Committee that its important work can be conducted without any distractio­ns whatsoever. I am genuinely sorry that recent events make it impossible for this to happen if I remain Chair.

“I have always been passionate about select committees, having served as either chair or member for half of my time in Parliament. The integrity of the Select Committee system matters to me. Those who hold others to account, must themselves be accountabl­e.”

He insisted he was “immeasurab­ly proud” of the work the committee has carried out over the last nine years. Mr Vaz said the decision to resign and stand aside immediatel­y from the committee’s business was “my decision, and mine alone” and “my first considerat­ion has been the effect of recent events on my family”.

He has recommende­d that, in the interim, Conservati­ve MP Tim Loughton should chair proceeding­s.

Mr Vaz thanked fellow committee members past and present “for their tremendous support”, as well as Commons and committee clerks.

Conservati­ve Home Affairs Committee member David Burrowes told BBC Radio 4’s World At One: “I think he has done the right and honourable thing. It was the inevitable thing, I think, given the nature of the allegation­s and his role as chairman of the committee.

“It wasn’t a party political view … It would have been a cross-party view that would have been given to Keith and he has taken the right view for the good of the committee.”

Mr Burrowes said Mr Vaz was “an excellent chair” but his position was “untenable”. His continued occupancy of the chair would have led the committee’s integrity “being called into question”, he said.

The committee’s inquiries into issues like prostituti­on or drugs “demand an objective view and one that isn’t likely to be conflicted and isn’t liable to be undermined or compromise­d”, said Mr Burrowes.

 ??  ?? 0 Keith Vaz is alleged to have paid two male escorts
0 Keith Vaz is alleged to have paid two male escorts

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