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Tory MPs who loyally defended Boris Johnson against the "kangaroo court" Privileges Committee face a new threat to their seats after the Lib Dems moved to sanction them.
On Monday MPs will debate the Privileges Committee’s "special report" into those MPs who criticised the work of the committee, including Nadine Dorries, Jacob Rees-Mogg and Priti Patel.
Sir Ed Davey’s party has now laid an amendment, however, calling for those named MPs to “be referred to the Committee of Privileges to consider whether the conduct of those Hon. and Rt hon.
members amounted to contempt of the House, and accordingly recommend any sanction they deem fit”.
The committee’s special report said they had no ability to issue sanctions, as it would be a matter for the House.
Referring them back to the committee with a mandate to impose sanctions, however, could see them face by-elections.
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Were the committee to recommend sanctions of over 10 days for those named in the report, and the Commons to vote for it, Mr Sunak could be facing a further seven by-elections to the swathe
he’s already battling.
A Lib Dem source told the Telegraph: “Boris Johnson’s cronies used bully boy tactics to undermine this investigation at every turn, all to try to get him off the hook for his Partygate lies.
The amendment names Sir Jacob Rees Mogg, Priti Patel, Nadine Dorries, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, Sir Michael Fabricant, Brendan Clarke-Smith and Mark Jenkinson.
The Tories will wait to hear confirmation of whether the amendment is selected by the Speaker before coming up with a strategy.
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The content was requested by the UK COVID-19 inquiry. But the Cabinet Office has so far refused to hand over the documents, arguing the request is too broad.
Meanwhile, Priti Patel, Brendan Clarke-Smith and Andrew Jenkyns are among five Tories to have submitted an alternative amendment, which would defend the free speech of MPs critical of the
Privileges Committee.
Their amendment waters down the critical wording of the motion, and merely notes the report with no further action.
The original motion would say the Commons “notes with approval” the Special Report, something their amendment omits.
Lord Goldsmith, who was also named in the report and quit as a minister last week over concerns about Rishi Sunak’s commitment to the environment, gave his first TV interview last night,
telling Channel 4: “My view is that: were that committee a court of law, with a jury in the normal sense – the jury would have been sacked and replaced almost on day one.
“I think it’s very hard to have a hearing of that sort where almost every member of the committee had expressed their view very publicly before they had even seen the evidence.
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