The Sunday Post (Inverness)

MATT HANCOCK RESIGNS AFTER OFFICE CLINCH

Health Secretary goes amid inquiry calls

- By Mark Aitken maitken@sundaypost.com

Health Secretary Matt Hancock resigned last night amid mounting pressure over his office clinch with an aide.

Images of him embracing Gina Coladangel­o amid allegation­s of an affair provoked demands to know how she secured a place on the health department board meant to hold him to account.

Hours after the images emerged on Friday, Hancock, who is married, apologised for breaching social distancing restrictio­ns, an apology accepted by Downing Street. However, amid mounting pressure and accusation­s of cronyism, the minister, who has endured months of criticism for his handling of the pandemic, last night announced his resignatio­n.

Afterwards, it was reported on Twitter that aide Coladangel­o was also leaving her role. BBC political correspond­ent Laura Kuenssberg tweeted: “Gina Coladangel­o is leaving her role at the Department of Health.”

Hancock, whose wife Martha was seen leaving the couple’s home hours earlier, released his resignatio­n letter to Boris Johnson last night. He wrote: “The last thing I would want is for my private life to distract attention from the focus that is leading us out of this crisis. We owe it to people who have sacrificed so much to be honest when we have let them down, as I have done by breaching the guidance.” In response, the Prime Minister wrote: “You should leave office very proud of what you have achieved.”

Late last night it was revealed that former chancellor Sajid Javid would replace Hancock as health minister after his resignatio­n. However, the other parties said he should have been sacked, not allowed to resign, and his going did not answer serious questions around his relationsh­ip with his aide. Labour last night demanded the Department of Health and Social Care’s most senior official release all documents relating to the recruitmen­t of Coladangel­o to the £1,000-a-day position.

She was initially taken on as an unpaid adviser on a six-month contract last year, before being appointed as a non-executive director. The role offers pay of £15,000 a year for up to 20 days’ work and is described on the government website “as bringing expertise, scrutiny and challenge”.

Coladangel­o, who is also married, and Hancock, who she knew at university, were filmed embracing in the health secretary’s office in May but the images were published by The Sun on Friday. The pair have been friends since they attended Oxford University, where they worked on student radio together. In a letter to DHSC permanent secretary Sir Chris Wormald, Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner said their relationsh­ip raised questions about the potential for a conflict of interest. These included exactly what advice or assistance Coladangel­o provided Hancock with, the recruitmen­t process she went through, and whether they had declared any personal relationsh­ip. Rayner said: “We need to know whether any conflicts of interest were declared. The department must publish all correspond­ence and documents related to this appointmen­t.”

Meanwhile, Dave Penman, general secretary of the FDA union, which represents senior civil servants, said the relationsh­ip between Hancock and Coladangel­o should have been declared. He said: “Inevitably, there would have been issues where there was the potential to challenge the secretary of state from the board. If one of those members was having an intimate relationsh­ip with the secretary of state, it completely undermines those decisions.”

SNP Westminste­r deputy leader Kirsten Oswald said Boris Johnson has risked “jeopardisi­ng vital public health measures” by failing to sack Hancock immediatel­y, adding: “This cannot simply be brushed under the carpet, and there must be a full independen­t public inquiry into Tory sleaze and cronyism without any further delay.”

It was reported last night that Coladangel­o would also leave her role at the Department of Health while Hancock was said to have told his wife Martha, that he was leaving her on Thursday night as the story broke. Yesterday, his friends had told reporters his relationsh­ip with Coladangel­o was serious.

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 ??  ?? The Sun breaks the story on Friday, above, and Matt Hancock and aide Gina Coladangel­o, main
The Sun breaks the story on Friday, above, and Matt Hancock and aide Gina Coladangel­o, main
 ??  ?? Martha Hancock yesterday
Martha Hancock yesterday

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