A Tory peer and pal of Boris Johnson is set to be kicked out of the House of Lords bars for a year after he was found to have bullied and harassed two people while drunk.
Lord Kulveer Ranger is also set to be suspended from the House for three weeks following an investigation into an incident in Parliament’s Strangers’ Bar in January. The House of Lords Conduct Committee made the recommendation after its investigation found he had been “visibly drunk” and made “various inappropriate comments” to a group of people in Parliament’s Strangers’ Bar. It has recommended the Commons authorities consider whether to also ban him from their bars.
Lord Ranger, who advised Mr Johnson on transport policy when he was London mayor, then returned to the same group and “acted aggressively, shouting and swearing”, calling them “f*****g useless” and “invading their personal space”, the committee’s report said. Lord Ranger, who was made a peer the ex-PM’s resignation honours list, has apologised to the two complainants.
He said he did not recall the incident but was “deeply mortified at the descriptions of my behaviour” and “saddened to hear that I caused you distress”. He did not attempt to excuse his behaviour but said it was a “wholly uncharacteristic outburst” at a time when his wife and children’s health issues had “taken a significant toll” on his physical and mental health.
The House of Lords Standards Commissioner originally recommended that Lord Ranger be suspended for just one week but the Conduct Committee increased the sanction after finding his behaviour had been “particularly serious”. The committee said: “Lord Ranger’s bullying behaviour was prolonged in duration, with two separate incidents separated by up to an hour, alcohol was an important factor, and it led to a finding of harassment as well as bullying.”
It also noted the impact on the complainants, one of whom said the incident had made her “more wary about her interactions with people” and left her with trouble sleeping.
As well as suspending Lord Ranger for three weeks, the committee recommended he be banned from the House of Lords bars for 12 months to “underline the House’s disapproval of alcohol-related misconduct” and invited House of Commons authorities to institute a similar ban for its own facilities.
The suggested sanctions still need to be approved by peers, who are expected to vote on the recommendations in early June.