James Cleverly’s gaffe-filled 42 days as Home Secretary – swearing to sick joke
James Cleverly has solely been Home Secretary for 42 days however he’s already creating a fame for being gaffe-prone.
The Cabinet minister has been branded “Colonel Calamity” by Tory MPs as he goes from disaster to disaster. Within his first days within the job he endured a collection of excruciating TV and radio appearances as he was grilled on issues he’s alleged to have stated behind closed doorways.
Now he’s going through calls to resign as a minister after he made a joke about giving his spouse a date-rape drug. The Mirror revealed that he informed feminine visitors at a Downing Street occasion that “a little bit of Rohypnol in her drink every night” was “not really illegal if it’s only a little bit”. The Fawcett Society stated the Tory Cabinet minister couldn’t be trusted to “seriously address violence against women and girls”.
Mr Cleverly was moved to the Home Office final month after David Cameron changed him as Foreign Secretary.
Here we check out his gaffe-filled first few weeks answerable for the Home Office.
Rwanda plan is ‘batsh**’
In his first week within the job, Mr Cleverly was left squirming as he was grilled about claims he described the Rwanda migrant deportation plan as “batsh**”. The Tory minister is alleged to have made the remark privately after the scheme was first introduced.
As he made considered one of his first appearances within the Commons as Home Secretary his Labour counterpart Yvette Cooper informed MPs: “I don’t believe the new Home Secretary ever believed in the Rwanda plan. He distanced himself from it and his predecessor’s language on it. He may even on occasion have privately called it ‘bats***’.”
In an interview with BBC Breakfast’s Charlie Stayt, Mr Cleverly stated: “I don’t remember, I certainly don’t remember saying anything like that.” He described it as “Parliamentary theatre” as he tried to deflect. Asked about it on Sky News, he stated: “I don’t recognise that phrase.”
Stockton is a ‘sh**hole’
Just a couple of days later, the Home Secretary confronted the same row as he was accused of calling a Labour MP’s constituency a “s**thole” after he raised the difficulty of poverty in his space throughout Prime Minister’s Questions.
Stockton North MP Alex Cunningham requested Rishi Sunak: “Why are 34% of children in my constituency living in poverty?” A heckle might then be heard within the Commons chamber, with a number of Labour MPs claiming Mr Cleverly shouted: “Because it’s a sh**thole.”
His spokesman denied the declare, saying : “He did not, and would not. He’s disappointed they would accuse him of doing so.”
A day later his aides insisted that he had really been insulting Mr Cunningham and calling him a “sh** MP”. His spokesman stated: “James made a comment. He called Alex Cunningham a sh** MP. He apologises for unparliamentary language. As was made clear yesterday, he would never criticise Stockton. He’s campaigned in Stockton and is clear that it is a great place.”
Tory Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen had simply minutes earlier hit out on the “childish and unprofessional” language and stated Mr Cleverly had dragged the Stockton’s “name through the mud”.
Revolt over Rwanda interview
Mr Cleverly confronted an indignant backlash from Tory MPs after he described the Rwanda plan as “not the be all and end all” in his first newspaper interview within the job. He informed The Times that individuals shouldn’t “fixate” on the Government’s flagship scheme.
And in remarks that notably irked a few of his colleagues, he additionally warned in opposition to “hyperbole” in discussions round total ranges of migration.
Tory former Cabinet minister Simon Clarke retweeted a warning by one pollster that the Tories face an “electorally existential migration challenge”. “No hyperbole here,” he added.
Another Conservative backbencher informed the Telegraph : “James Cleverly clearly doesn’t get how important immigration is as an issue to people. Describing the words that some colleagues have used as hyperbole shows a complete disregard for the concerns of voters.”
Migrant visa U-turn
Tory MPs final week accused the Government of “weakness” after the Home Secretary was pressured into an embarrassing climbdown on migrant visas.
The Home Office quietly watered down plans to sharply enhance the earnings threshold for Brits bringing members of the family to the UK to £38,700 from £18,600 subsequent spring. Instead it’ll now enhance to £29,000 with no timetable set for the upper determine. The resolution to water down the coverage got here simply 48 hours after MPs had vacated the Commons for the Christmas break.
Tory MP David Jones, deputy chairman of the right-wing European Research Group, stated the choice was a “regrettable sign of weakness”. He added: “The latest net migration figures very starkly showed the extent of the crisis we face. Increasing the threshold was absolutely necessary to address that crisis. The Government should have stuck to its guns.”
Jonathan Gullis, a former Tory minister, said he was “changing into more and more annoyed” and hit out at ministers for sneaking out the announcement during the Christmas period. He added: “I feel for these voters they’re going to simply be deeply disenchanted that they’ve heard the rhetoric, they’ve not seen them [ministers] comply with via with the supply.”
Date-rape drug joke
Mr Cleverly is now in trouble after he joked about giving his wife a date-rape drug, just hours after announcing a crackdown on the growing epidemic of drinks spiking.
The top Tory told female guests at a No10 reception that “a little bit of Rohypnol in her drink every night” was “not really illegal if it’s only a little bit”. Mr Cleverly also laughed that the secret to a long marriage was ensuring your spouse was “someone who is always mildly sedated so she can never realise there are better men out there.”
He said he realised he sounded like he was promoting “spiking”. His spokesman brushed aside his comments as “an ironic joke” But Mr Cleverly’s disgusting jibe came on the same day he vowed to strengthen the law to give spiking victims the confidence to come forward.
Women’s rights campaigners have demanded that Mr Cleverly resign as Home Secretary. The Fawcett Society said the Tory Cabinet minister could not be trusted to “significantly deal with violence in opposition to girls and women”.
Conversations at Downing Street receptions are usually understood to be “off the record”. The Sunday Mirror decided to publish what Mr Cleverly said because we believe these are exceptional circumstances given his role as Home Secretary and the subject matter. It is our duty to inform readers of what was said by the minister responsible for crime.
Mr Cleverly’s spokesman said: “In what was always understood as a private conversation, the Home Secretary made what was clearly meant to be an ironic joke – for which he apologises.”