The Sunday Telegraph

Porn MP: I was looking for tractors

Disgraced backbenche­r resigns over ‘moment of madness’ watching explicit site in Commons

- By Steve Bird and Tom Ough

NEIL PARISH has said he will quit as an MP after admitting watching pornograph­y twice in Parliament.

The now-former Conservati­ve MP for Tiverton and Honiton in Devon, who is a farmer by trade, said he first accidental­ly viewed the material after searching for tractors online but then returned to it for a second time deliberate­ly in a “moment of madness”.

The 65-year-old environmen­t select committee chairman was suspended by the Conservati­ve Party on Friday after two female colleagues reported seeing him looking at the explicit content on his mobile phone in the Commons chamber and at a select committee hearing. Mr Parish said he recognised the “furore” and “damage” he had caused his family, constituen­cy and local Conservati­ve associatio­n.

In an interview with BBC South West he said: “The situation was that, funnily enough, it was tractors I was looking at, so I did get into another website with sort of a very similar name and I watched it for a bit, which I shouldn’t have done.

“My crime – my biggest crime – is that on another occasion I went in a second time, and that was deliberate. That was sitting waiting to vote on the side of the chamber.” He added: “What I did was absolutely wrong. I was wrong, I was stupid, I lost sense of mind.”

Mr Parish gave the interview yesterday morning after leaving his parents’ farm near Bridgwater, North Somerset, where there is an old Claas Dominator 76 combine harvester and a Massey Ferguson 265 tractor in a barn.

In response to his admission, Angela Rayner, the deputy Labour leader, tweeted: “He was looking for tractors but ended up with porn actors? Neil Parish must think you were all born yesterday. Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ves are a national embarrassm­ent.”

Mr Parish denied watching the pornograph­y in way that he hoped others people in the chamber would see.

“I make a full apology. A total full apology. It was not my intention to intimidate,” he added.

He appeared emotional as he explained how overnight he had decided to quit as the Devonshire MP.

“In the end, I could see that the furore and the damage I was causing my family and constituen­cy and associatio­n and it wasn’t worth carrying on,” he said. “What I do want to put on record, for all my rights and wrongs, I was not proud of what I was doing. I was not actually making sure people could see it.”

He rejected the suggestion he “was watching it and intimidati­ng women”, adding how he had maintained 12 years in parliament with “one of the best reputation­s ever – or I did have”.

Asked what possessed him to to view the pornograph­y in a public place, he replied: “I don’t know. I think I must have taken complete leave of my senses, my sensibilit­ies, and a sense of decency – everything. I’m not defending what I did for one moment. But, I thought the best thing I could do is tell the truth.” The Tiverton and Honiton Conservati­ves issued a statement saying it supported his decision to resign, triggering a by-election in the Tory safe seat.

“We would like to take this opportunit­y to thank Neil Parish for his service to our communitie­s over the past 12 years,” a spokesman added.

Mr Parish had been facing an investigat­ion by Parliament’s standards commission over the incident.

MPs who are found to have violated the code of conduct can face a variety of sanctions, including being ordered to apologise to the Commons or being suspended or expelled.

Labour has criticised the wider culture in Parliament, accusing the Government of having known about the incident for days but had failed to take action. Senior Tory MP Caroline Nokes had also criticised the delay by the Tory whips office to suspend Mr Parish.

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