The British secretary of state for defence resigned on Wednesday after allegations emerged about inappropriate sexual behavior — the latest twist in a growing scandal over harassment and abuse in the country’s corridors of power.
British Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon said in a resignation letter to British Prime Minister Theresa May that his “previous conduct ... may have fallen below the high standards that we require of the armed forces.”
Fallon, 65, was first elected to parliament in 1983 and has been defense secretary since 2014.
Photo: AP
A newspaper reported last weekend that Fallon had repeatedly touched a journalist’s knee at a function in 2002.
The journalist in question said she had shrugged off the incident, but reports suggested that other allegations about Fallon might soon emerge.
Accepting his resignation, May said she appreciated “the characteristically serious manner in which you have considered your position.”
The scandal surrounding Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein has emboldened people in many industries to speak up about sexual harassment or attacks at the hands of powerful individuals who control their future job prospects.
In the UK, it has produced soul-searching about the growing number of reports of sexual harassment and abuse in politics.
May has called a meeting of party leaders to discuss how to deal with the topic, amid a growing roster of allegations about inappropriate behavior by politicians and parliamentary staff.
May has also ordered an investigation into claims another senior minister made inappropriate advances to a Conservative activist.
Writer and academic Kate Maltby said British First Secretary of State Damian Green “fleetingly” touched her knee in 2015 and later sent her a “suggestive” text message after she was pictured wearing a corset in a newspaper.
Maltby wrote in the Times newspaper that Green “offered me career advice and in the same breath made it clear he was sexually interested.”
“It was not acceptable to me at the time and it should not be acceptable behavior in Westminster in the future,” Maltby wrote.
Green denied making sexual advances and called the allegations “a complete shock” and “deeply hurtful.”
May’s office said the prime minister had asked the head of the civil service to “establish the facts and report back as soon as possible.”
Meanwhile, an opposition Labour Party activist said the party discouraged her from reporting that she was raped at a Labour conference in 2011 when she was 19 years old.
Bex Bailey said a party official told her “that if I did, it might damage me.”
The party said it was investigating the report.
Labour MP Lisa Nandy on Wednesday said that she had raised concerns three years ago that party whips kept claims of sexual abuse as ammunition to control lawmakers, rather than dealing with the allegations.
May said the whips should make it clear that allegations of crimes should be reported to police.
She has asked other party leaders to meet her next week to discuss setting up an independent grievance procedure for people working in parliament.
“We have a duty to ensure that everyone coming here to contribute to public life is treated with respect,” she told lawmakers during her weekly session in the House of Commons.
IDENTITY: A sex extortion scandal involving Thai monks has deeply shaken public trust in the clergy, with 11 monks implicated in financial misconduct Reverence for the saffron-robed Buddhist monkhood is deeply woven into Thai society, but a sex extortion scandal has besmirched the clergy and left the devout questioning their faith. Thai police this week arrested a woman accused of bedding at least 11 monks in breach of their vows of celibacy, before blackmailing them with thousands of secretly taken photos of their trysts. The monks are said to have paid nearly US$12 million, funneled out of their monasteries, funded by donations from laypeople hoping to increase their merit and prospects for reincarnation. The scandal provoked outrage over hypocrisy in the monkhood, concern that their status
The United States Federal Communications Commission said on Wednesday it plans to adopt rules to bar companies from connecting undersea submarine communication cables to the US that include Chinese technology or equipment. “We have seen submarine cable infrastructure threatened in recent years by foreign adversaries, like China,” FCC Chair Brendan Carr said in a statement. “We are therefore taking action here to guard our submarine cables against foreign adversary ownership, and access as well as cyber and physical threats.” The United States has for years expressed concerns about China’s role in handling network traffic and the potential for espionage. The U.S. has
A disillusioned Japanese electorate feeling the economic pinch goes to the polls today, as a right-wing party promoting a “Japanese first” agenda gains popularity, with fears over foreigners becoming a major election issue. Birthed on YouTube during the COVID-19 pandemic, spreading conspiracy theories about vaccinations and a cabal of global elites, the Sanseito Party has widened its appeal ahead of today’s upper house vote — railing against immigration and dragging rhetoric that was once confined to Japan’s political fringes into the mainstream. Polls show the party might only secure 10 to 15 of the 125 seats up for grabs, but it is
The US Department of Education on Tuesday said it opened a foreign funding investigation into the University of Michigan (UM) while alleging it found “inaccurate and incomplete disclosures” in a review of the university’s foreign reports, after two Chinese scientists linked to the school were separately charged with smuggling biological materials into the US. As part of the investigation, the department asked the university to share, within 30 days, tax records related to foreign funding, a list of foreign gifts, grants and contracts with any foreign source, and other documents, the department said in a statement and in a letter to