MP Resigns After Watching Porn in House of Commons

Neil Parish says he'd intended to look at tractors
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 30, 2022 4:00 PM CDT
Watching Porn in the House Costs UK Lawmaker His Job
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is seen via videoconference as he makes an address to Parliament in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Tuesday, March 15, 2022.   (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP)

A British lawmaker from the governing Conservative Party has resigned after admitting he watched pornography on his phone in the House of Commons chamber. Neil Parish, a member of Parliament since 2010, announced his decision Saturday after pressure from members of his own party who sought to defuse sleaze allegations before Britain holds its local elections on May 5. The ballot is seen as pivotal for Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the AP reports, who is already facing a voter backlash over lockdown-breaking parties in government offices during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Parish, 65, stepped down after what he described as a moment of "madness." Chairman of the House’s Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, he said he was trying to look at a tractor website, but stumbled into a porn site with a similar name and watched it for "a bit." He told the BBC: "My biggest crime is that on another occasion I went in a second time. And that was deliberate." Reports that a lawmaker had watched porn amid the historic green benches of the House of Commons triggered a flood of complaints from women in Parliament about the misogyny and sexual harassment they have faced while doing their jobs.

Women now hold almost 40% of the seats in the House of Commons. But lawmakers and staff say harassment and inappropriate behavior are still rampant under a system that largely allows members to police themselves. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Parish's resignation should be a moment for people across the UK to say “enough is enough." Parish rejected the notion that he meant to intimidate anyone. "For all my rights and wrongs, I was not proud of what I was doing," he said. "And the one thing I wasn't doing, and which I will take to my grave as being true, is I was not actually making sure people could see it. In fact, I was trying to do quite the opposite."

(More House of Commons stories.)

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