A Labour Party lawmaker on Saturday said he regretted ‘badly misjudged’ comments after UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer sacked him as a minister
It is the latest bump in the road Starmer’s government has hit in its first seven months in power despite a landslide election victory in July 2024.
The premier dismissed Andrew Gwynne as a junior health minister as soon as he became aware of the comments, the domestic PA news agency said.
He has also been suspended from the Labour Party, with media reports alleging that Gwynne’s made anti-Semitic remarks.
‘I deeply regret my badly misjudged comments and apologise for any offence I’ve caused’, Gwynne said on X.
‘I entirely understand the decisions the PM and the party have taken’, he added.
Gwynne posted messages in a WhatsApp group which he shares with more than a dozen Labour councillors, party officials and at least one other MP, the Mail on Sunday reported.
He made anti-Semitic slights and joked about a constituent being ‘mown down’ by a truck, the newspaper said.
‘The Prime Minister is determined to uphold high standards of conduct in public office and lead a government in the service of working people’, a government spokesperson said.
‘He will not hesitate to take action against any minister who fails to meet these standards, as he has in this case’, the spokesperson added.
In November, Louise Haigh resigned as transport secretary after revelations that she pleaded guilty to a criminal offence before becoming a member of parliament.
Her resignation was the first by a member of Starmer’s cabinet since his Labour party won power at the 4 July general election, ending the Conservative party’s 14 years in power.