Tory MP demands Labour’s Corbynista deputy leader Angela Rayner apologise for branding him ‘scum’

A Tory MP today demanded that Labour’s deputy leader Angela Rayner apologise for branding him ‘scum’ during a heated debate in the Commons on the Covid-19 crisis.

Chris Clarkson had suggested that senior Labour figures were viewing the coronavirus pandemic as a ‘good crisis’ to be exploited. 

Ms Rayner, a hard-Left Corbynite on the frontbench, then appeared to heckle the Conservative backbencher, who asked her: ‘Excuse me, did the honourable lady just call me scum?’ 

The exchange prompted an intervention from a furious Commons Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing who said she would not accept such comments in the chamber ‘under any circumstances’. 

Mr Clarkson has now joined demands from other outraged Tories for Ms Rayner to apologise as they called on Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer to reprimand her over the remark.

In a public letter, the Conservative MP said: ‘During my contribution highlighting the importance of the public health measures being introduced in the North of England, I drew the attention of the House to comments you made towards me, namely referring to me as ‘scum’.

‘As elected representatives I believe we have a duty to lead by example. I am also aware that this is not the first time you have used the phrase ‘scum’ to describe members of this Government and of my Party.’  

Angela Rayner was today accused of calling a Tory MP ‘scum’ during a House of Commons debate on coronavirus

Conservative backbencher Chris Clarkson said he heard Ms Rayner make the remark after he criticised Labour's response to the crisis

Conservative backbencher Chris Clarkson said he heard Ms Rayner make the remark after he criticised Labour’s response to the crisis

Angela Rayner: the hard-Left Corbynite who became Labour’s deputy leader in April

Angela Rayner was only elected to Parliament as the Labour MP for Ashton-under-Lyne for the first time in 2015 but she has swiftly risen up the ranks to national prominence. 

It did not take long for Ms Rayner to be welcomed to the Labour frontbench under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn as she was made shadow education secretary in 2016. 

She became one of Mr Corbyn’s most vocal defenders, both in the House of Commons and on the airwaves, before the party sank to its disastrous general election defeat in December last year. 

She swiftly launched a bid for the party’s deputy leadership in the aftermath of the car crash poll, standing on a so-called hard-left ‘dream ticket’ with Westminster housemate and former frontbencher Rebecca Long-Bailey who put herself forward for the top job. 

While Ms Long-Bailey failed to become leader, Ms Rayner was elected as Sir Keir Starmer’s deputy in April this year. 

The flame-haired 40-year-old has drawn on her experience as a one-time struggling teenage mother throughout her political career. 

Her socialist credentials were forged by a tough upbringing as a carer to her bipolar mother aged just 10 before becoming pregnant with the first of her three children at the age of 16. 

She has previously told how becoming pregnant so young ‘saved’ her. 

She proudly welcomed her own granddaughter at the age of just 37 with a tweet jokingly referring to herself as ‘Grangela’.

The clash between Ms Rayner and Mr Clarkson happened during an opposition day debate in the Commons this afternoon as MPs debated funding for areas facing additional coronavirus restrictions. 

Labour is calling on the Government to publish ‘clear and fair national criteria for financial support for jobs and businesses’ in areas moved into Tier Three. 

Mr Clarkson, the Tory MP for Heywood and Middleton, told Labour to ‘park the opportunism’ as he cited comments made by shadow education secretary Kate Green who previously said Covid-19 was a ‘good crisis’ for the party. 

He said: ‘I know (Kate Green) thinks this is a good crisis that the Labour Party should exploit, and I know she speaks for a lot of her frontbench colleagues when she says that – you just need to see it in the support, U-turn, oppose approach that has characterised their hindsight-heavy behaviour.’

Following a heckle from Ms Rayner, Mr Clarkson replied: ‘Excuse me, did the honourable lady just call me scum?’ 

Dame Eleanor immediately interrupted proceedings and blasted: ‘Order, order, order. From the front bench we do not have remarks like that. 

‘Not under any circumstances, no matter how heartfelt it might be. Not at all.’

Making a point of order in response to the accusation, Ms Rayner said: ‘I think one of the things I’d ask for your guidance on is (Mr Clarkson) saying things about the front bench which is inaccurate in their speech and I’d ask them to withdraw it.’

Dame Eleanor replied: ‘It is not for the chair to decide what is accurate or inaccurate, I cannot make such a judgment.

‘But of course, I will ask (Mr Clarkson) to be reasonable in what he says and to be careful of his remarks.

‘And I’m sure that if (Mr Clarkson) feels that he has said anything that is offensive to (Ms Rayner) then he will undoubtedly withdraw and apologise immediately.’

Resuming his speech, Mr Clarkson said: ‘Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker, and thank you for your guidance. 

‘To clarify, I asked (Ms Rayner) if she called me that (scum) – that is what I heard.’

Mr Clarkson proceeded with his speech without withdrawing his earlier comments.  

Amanda Milling, the chairman of the Conservative Party, called for Sir Keir to ‘take action’ against Ms Rayner. 

Tweeting a video of the exchange, she said: ‘This is totally unacceptable from Angela Rayner. At 29 seconds you can clearly hear her call Chris Clarkson ‘scum’. 

A furious Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing intervened and said she would not allow such remarks 'under any circumstances'

A furious Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing intervened and said she would not allow such remarks ‘under any circumstances’ 

Ms Rayner rose to political prominence after becoming shadow education secretary under Jeremy Corbyn's leadership in 2016. She became one of Mr Corbyn's most vocal defenders

Ms Rayner rose to political prominence after becoming shadow education secretary under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership in 2016. She became one of Mr Corbyn’s most vocal defenders

‘Stupid women’ and ‘sanctimonious dwarves’: Rudeness in the Commons over the years 

Angry confrontations in the Commons have taken place as tempers become frayed over the years.

But they have been few and far between since numbers were limited by the coronavirus regulations allowing just 50 MPs to sit on the green benches.

Back in May new Speaker Lindsay Hoyle stamped his authority on the chamber when he threatened to kick Matt Hancock out of chamber after the Health Secretary interrupted Sir Keir Starmer at PMQs. 

The Commons Speaker initially said he did not ‘mind you advising the Prime Minister’ but told him to be quiet when Sir Keir was speaking.

Mr Hancock then protested prompting Sir Lindsay to hit back and ask the Health Secretary: ‘Sorry – do you want to leave the chamber?’

Two years  previously, his predecessor John Bercow was in a different position of having to apologise for his own language. 

In May 2018 the ex=speaker was criticised after being accused of calling former Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom a ‘stupid woman’.

He told the House that he had used the word ‘stupid’ in a ‘muttered aside’ during a row over business scheduling, and regarded Mrs Leadsom as a very ‘able’ minister. 

However, he stopped short of apologising and insisted he would continue to speak out frankly when he felt ministers were behaving badly

Jeremy Corbyn was engulfed in a sexism row the following December  over calling Theresa May a ‘stupid woman’ at PMQs.

The Labour leader faced a furious backlash from Tories and his own MPs after appearing to mouth the jibe during a stormy Commons session.

In a brutal pre-Christmas exchanges, Mrs May had accused Mr Corbyn of descending into ‘pantomime’ over Brexit, saying even his own party was not behind him. But as the PM sat down to cheers, Mr Corbyn seemed to mutter: ‘Stupid woman.’

However, hauled back to the House to explain himself hours later, Mr Corbyn flatly denied uttering the words.

But savage putdowns are not new. In 2010, then minister Simon Burns was forced to apologise after calling Mr Bercow a ‘ stupid, sanctimonious dwarf’.

The health minister was overheard criticising the then new Speaker  after being ordered him to face the chamber when answering questions at the dispatch box.

Mr Bercow, who is 5ft 6in, did not hear the remark and made no complaint even when other MPs protested.

‘As elected representatives we have a duty to lead by example. Will she apologise and if not will Keir Starmer take action?’   

Fellow Tory MP Dehenna Davison echoed a similar sentiment as she said: ‘Absolutely disgraceful behaviour from the Labour front bench. 

‘Rayner needs to apologise immediately. This is not what politics is about.’

Ms Rayner was challenged in the Commons over the incident as Conservative MP Sara Britcliffe said: ‘The attitude that I’ve just seen in this chamber is what turned many of my residents against the Labour Party. It’s unacceptable.’ 

Opening the debate, Ms Rayner had earlier called the Government’s financial support package for Greater Manchester as it moves into Tier Three ‘an insult’ and also revealed that her aunt had died last week from Covid-19 at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport.

Labour’s motion calling for a ‘fair national criteria’ to be put in place to support areas facing additional restrictions was ultimately defeated by 261 votes to 340, a majority of 79.

Labour’s Rebecca Long-Bailey, a Westminster housemate of Ms Rayner, criticised the Government’s strategy, telling MPs: ‘To most this doesn’t appear to be an exercise in infection control.

‘It appears to be an exercise in keeping the North and other Tier Three areas away from the rest of the country to engage in our own version of the Hunger Games – where only the fittest and wealthiest will survive.’

Labour MP Mike Kane (Wythenshawe and Sale East) also told the debate: ‘Not since the Peterloo Massacre of 1819 has the state displayed such coercive power over the people of Greater Manchester.’ 

Tory William Wragg also urged MPs ‘not to underestimate the anger felt by the public’ over the stricter restrictions.

He said: ‘I do not support Labour’s suggestion of a national lockdown which makes little sense at all.

‘However, what concerns me most is the coming hardship, the rising unemployment and some people’s despair.

‘Indeed, I cannot help but reflect that the medicine risks being worse than the disease.’ 

Ms Rayner was elected deputy leader of the Labour Party in April this year after rising to prominence in Westminster as shadow education secretary in Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow cabinet. 

The MP for Ashton-under-Lyne, first elected to Parliament in 2015, has previously drawn heavily on her experience as a one-time struggling teenage mother.

The mother-of-three was 16 when she had her first son, Ryan, and has told how becoming pregnant so young ‘saved’ her. 

She proudly welcomed her own granddaughter at the age of just 37 with a tweet jokingly referring to herself as ‘Grangela’.

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