Matt Hancock is ‘looking for a change of career’ by entering I’m A Celebrity, Lembit Opik says
Matt Hancock is ‘looking for a change of career’ by entering I’m A Celebrity and is NOT motivated by massive pay cheque, jungle veteran Lembit Opik says
- Matt Hancock is ‘looking for a change of career’ by entering I’m A Celebrity
- Jungle veteran Lembit Opik said cash is not the ‘main motivation’ for Mr Hancock
- Former health secretary has also recently filmed Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins
Matt Hancock is looking for a change of career by entering I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! and is not motivated by a massive pay cheque, jungle veteran Lembit Opik has said.
Mr Opik, who starred in the ITV show in 2010, said that he doesn’t think the rumoured £400,000 appearance fee is the former health secretary’s ‘main motivation’.
Mr Hancock, who has recently filmed Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins, will star in both the ITV and Channel 4 reality TV shows.
Mr Opik, the former Liberal Democrat MP for Montgomeryshire, told Times Radio: ‘I suspect the one-off payment isn’t the main motivation for Hancock.
‘I think he’s probably doing a career change here. If not, it’ll probably be changed for him anyway now.
Mr Hancock jumping while going on a run. He is looking for a change in career by joining I’m A Celebrity, jungle veteran Lembit Opik has said
The ex-Health Secretary, pictured in Brisbane, was kicked out of the parliamentary Tory party
‘He’s going to get voted in for lots of trials and so on, and I think as long as he doesn’t seem arrogant or indignant about the way he’s been treated by the media before, he might come across quite well.
‘He couldn’t be more unpopular than he is, so he’s either going to come out as unpopular — or more popular. It’s a no lose situation for him in that sense.
‘Let’s remember Nadine Dorries went in there, and she went on to be cabinet minister. So he might, not having seen any of this media corollary, really think that he’s got a future in politics, but I doubt that’s his agenda.’
The father-of-three has been accused of ‘cashing in’ on the pandemic by families affected by Covid who believe he only signed up for the reported £400,000 fee.
He will be competing on the primetime series alongside stars including singer Boy George, 61, rugby ace Mike Tindall, 44, DJ Chris Moyles, 48, and Coronation Street actress Sue Cleaver, 59.
Mr Hancock is not expected to enter the jungle with the initial group of 10 contestants when the show launches tonight at 9pm.
Mr Opik countered criticism of Mr Hancock, 44, for going on the show, comparing the former Tory’s time away from his constituency to Boris Johnson’s holidays over the summer.
The 57-year-old said: ‘Should MPs be allowed to do second jobs or not?
‘If he’d gone for three weeks on holiday to the north of England, or to Barbados, like Boris Johnson did, and then have to fly back to try to become leader, people would take a different view and this is the problem I’ve got.
‘There’s no principle objection to being in a reality show, Vince Cable got loads of praise for doing a cameo on Strictly Come Dancing.
‘The one big question is… they’re actually out of communication for those three weeks, that’s what makes this a bit different.
‘But if you took your family as an MP on holiday for four weeks in Australia, in principle it’s pretty similar.’
He said taking the role on I’m A Celebrity is ‘essentially a second job’.
‘It’s paid, it’s well-paid, and it takes time,’ he added.
‘But if you add up the amount of time that lots of politicians or barristers and lawyers take out of their parliamentary year to make a ton on money on the side, let’s face it, Keir Starmer was in hot water doing that and not preparing it properly, and Boris Johnson has also made hundreds of thousands.
‘But then you can actually see it in a different way.
The difference — it’s very public, Matt Hancock’s a very controversial character, and it’s all bunched up into three weeks instead of a proper year, so I think there’s an awful lot of dogs and mangers here.
‘Where people say “oh he shouldn’t be doing that”, well okay, add up the number of days that you’re doing work outside Parliament.
‘The difference is that you’ve become incommunicado in the jungle for a maximum of 23 days.
‘And he’s got a break clause, which says if there’s an emergency he’ll get hauled out of the jungle — I think that’s fair enough.’
The former Health Secretary, 44, filmed Celebrity SAS in Thailand while the Tory conference was on in September.
Although it was filmed first, the Channel 4 show will air after ITV’s I’m A Celebrity.
The deal has reportedly not fared well with Channel 4 chiefs, who agreed to the former health secretary’s request to remove a clause from his contract preventing him appearing in any similar reality show.
But it is alleged that Channel 4 was told this was for ‘parliamentary reasons’.
Nadine Dorries was on I’m A Celebrity in 2012, and then became a government cabinet minister
Mr Opik, who starred in the ITV show in 2010, said that he doesn’t think the rumoured £400,000 appearance fee is the former health secretary’s ‘main motivation’
Now sources on Celebrity SAS, which will be shown next year, say that they have been left with ‘sloppy seconds’, despite paying Mr Hancock up to £40,000.
One said: ‘Channel 4 and the production company that makes Celebrity SAS are raging about this. They trusted that Matt wouldn’t take part in any other programmes, so agreed to remove the clause.
‘It means Matt hasn’t breached any contract but it has caused total uproar at Channel 4.
‘They thought they had a coup but ITV put a spanner in the works.’
‘Obviously no one working on SAS is impressed as it really takes away from their show and it looks like they signed him after I’m A Celebrity – which isn’t true.’
‘Everyone is pretty angry about what has gone on and it’s not the best move Matt could have made.’
The former Health Secretary, 44, has also recently filmed for next year’s season of Channel 4’s Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins. Pictured swimming in London’s Serpentine
Last week Mr Hancock’s controversial booking on I’m A Celebrity was defended by ITV bosses, who maintain that contestants are plucked ‘from all walks of life.’
Speaking to MailOnline on the show’s set in Australia, Tweed Shire, executive producer Olly Nash defended Hancock’s signing, saying the ITV series, which starts today, has a history of featuring politicians.
He said: ‘It’s always an individual’s choice to come into camp and at any point a celebrity can say I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!
‘Nobody has to do the show, nobody has to stay in camp, and nobody has to do the trials. It’s up to any celebrity to make that choice.
‘It doesn’t matter who they are, what their past is, what their history is, once you get an ensemble cast in here you never know how everybody is going to gel so it’s a really hard question to answer.
‘It’s always great to have a good ensemble cast – that’s really the basis of putting everybody together. We cast people from all walks of life and always have done.
‘We have politicians going back years. You never know when they get in what they’re going to do.’
The MP for West Suffolk had the Tory whip removed following the announcement of his decision to go on the hit reality TV show, and stated that he had no expectations of returning to government.
A spokesperson for Matt Hancock previously told MailOnline said: ‘Matt will be making a donation to St Nicholas Hospice in Suffolk and causes supporting dyslexia off the back of his appearance.
‘He will also declare the amount he receives from the show to Parliament to ensure complete transparency, as normal.’