Chris Pincher: Call to suspend Tory MP after groping allegations

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Chris PincherImage source, PA Media

Boris Johnson is facing calls to suspend his former deputy chief whip as a Tory MP, after allegations he groped two men at a private members' club.

Chris Pincher quit his government post on Thursday, saying in a resignation letter he "drank far too much" and "embarrassed myself and other people".

Labour's Yvette Cooper called for his suspension whilst the "really serious" allegations are formally investigated.

"This is about sexual assault," she added.

The BBC has approached Mr Pincher, the Conservative Party and the Tory whips' office for comment.

Welsh Secretary Simon Hart said he was unable to confirm a formal probe had been launched into the allegations.

He added that the Tory chief whip, Chris Heaton-Harris, would be holding discussions on Friday to "decide properly what should happen".

The Sun newspaper first reported Mr Pincher's resignation, saying he was drinking at the Carlton Club in central London when he is said to have assaulted two other male guests.

Several concerned Tory MPs contacted the Conservative whips' office to complain about his behaviour, the paper said.

Dozens of people were present in a small room with a bar at the private members' club including other MPs, ministers, club officials and people working in public relations, the BBC understands.

In a resignation letter on Thursday, Mr Pincher wrote to the prime minister: "Last night I drank far too much."

He added: "I think the right thing to do in the circumstances is for me to resign as deputy chief whip. I owe it to you and the people I've caused upset to, to do this."

On Thursday, a Downing Street source said as things stood Mr Pincher would face no further action from the party and would keep the whip, allowing him to continue to sit as a Conservative MP.

A Tory MP told the BBC they had raised concerns about Mr Pincher's behaviour to senior figures in Number 10 and the Conservative Party - including Chief Whip Chris Heaton-Harris, Nigel Adams, government whips and one of the prime minister's top advisers Ben Gascoigne.

Speaking about raising concerns, the MP said: "Loads [of us] did when he was in frame for chief whip and he never got it. There were concerns, none of us had proof we could use. He should have the whip suspended and a by-election."

Shadow home secretary Ms Cooper told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "This is just a total disgrace, the response from Boris Johnson, from the government to this.

"These allegations are really serious, this is about sexual assault.

"So the idea that the response that we've seen - that the prime minister thinks he's done the decent thing by resigning, that there's no need for an investigation - that's a total disgrace."

She added: "There has to be a full investigation now, and of course he should have the whip suspended while that investigation takes place.

"We need to know the full truth about what has happened, and what the allegations are, but I think that's the first step that needs to take place."

She added that the Conservatives "have to show they take this sort of thing more seriously, and time and again Boris Johnson just doesn't".

"That is not good enough. This is about standards in public life."

Liberal Democrat chief whip Wendy Chamberlain said: "Given the seriousness of these allegations, it's difficult to see how Chris Pincher can continue as an MP.

"There now needs to be a full investigation and in the meantime Chris Pincher should have the Conservative whip withdrawn."

Tensions are bubbling in the Tory party about Number 10's line that Christopher Pincher has recognised his wrongdoing and therefore no further action should be taken.

Multiple Tory MPs, and some ministers, on the contrary think he needs to lose the party whip - meaning he would no longer sit as a Conservative MP.

One tells me they personally raised concerns about Mr Pincher's behaviour in the past, and they added "loads of us" raised concerns back when some thought he would be made the party's chief whip, but ended up being made deputy.

Multiple government ministers have also told the BBC that "of course" he should not keep the whip - despite what No10 are pushing.

It's telling, too, listening to how the cabinet minister brought out to defend the government line, Simon Hart, answered when asked if Mr Pincher should lose the whip.

He told Sky News: "I know what I'd like to see happen. You can probably tell what that is just from the way I'm trying to avoid answering your question", and said that the chief whip would be looking into this.

As ever, pressure from within government could continue to mount on No10 if ministers feel they are being made to defend something that some of them, quite obviously, don't want to.

Asked whether Mr Pincher was being formally investigated, Mr Hart warned against rushing any probe, saying it could be it "counter-productive".

He added that the chief whip would treat the matter "with the utmost seriousness" and should be afforded "the space to properly assess the situation" with others.

"It is absolutely proper that they spend today going through this with a fine tooth comb," he told the Today programme.

Mr Pincher previously stood down from the whips' office in 2017, when he was accused of making an unwanted pass at former Olympic rower and Conservative activist Alex Story.

But after an investigation by the party, he was cleared of any breach of its code of conduct.

Mr Pincher was first elected as MP for Tamworth in 2010 and served as a minister under former Prime Minister Theresa May.

He has served in the whips' office in Mr Johnson's government since February 2022, and was previously a minister in the Foreign Office and the Levelling Up Department.

Whips are MPs who are in charge of party discipline, and who have the job of trying to ensure that all MPs on their side vote with the party line in Parliament.

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