Jailed MP Mike Amesbury urged to quit Commons

Ian Shoesmith & Paul Burnell
BBC News
Reuters Mike Amesbury arrives at Chester Magistrates' Court ahead of his sentencing hearing on Monday. He wears a dark red tie, white shirt and a dark coat.Reuters
Mike Amesbury was jailed for 10 weeks on Monday after pleading guilty to assault

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has said she wants to see jailed MP Mike Amesbury resign or face recall so that his constituents can have new representation as soon as possible.

"I want to see him either obviously resign or face recall, and so that we can have a new MP in place," she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

The Runcorn and Helsby MP, who has been sitting as an Independent since he was suspended by Labour bosses following October's fracas, admitted assault and was sentenced to 10 weeks in jail on Monday for repeatedly punching a man in the street.

Ms Cooper was asked for a response on Amesbury continuing to be an MP and receive full pay as there is no automatic suspension for MPs serving a custodial sentence.

"I think you're asking me about parliamentary rules and procedure, which are obviously separate from those that the government runs ... I'm making my view clear, which is that I want to see the people of Runcorn get new representation as swiftly as possible," she said.

Ms Cooper was being interviewed on day the government puts its new Crime and Policing Bill to the Commons.

Cooper said Amesbury's behaviour was "completely unacceptable", that the Labour Party had taken immediate action and that he was no longer a sitting MP.

Asked on BBC Breakfast if Labour had been reluctant to call for his resignation because it feared facing Reform, Cooper said: "No, we look forward to having that by-election.

"There is a recall process and it is right that those processes should be in place."

Conservative co-chairman Nigel Huddleston called on Amesbury to "do the right thing and resign", adding that constituents "deserve an MP who is able to stand up for them in Parliament".

'Recall process'

Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf also called on the 55-year-old MP to quit immediately, adding: "The great people of Runcorn deserve far better than waiting six weeks for a recall petition to take place."

At an earlier court hearing, Amesbury pleaded guilty to assaulting 45-year-old Paul Fellows.

Video footage widely shared on social media showed a confrontation in the Cheshire town of Frodsham in the early hours of 26 October.

Sitting at Chester Magistrates' Court, Deputy Chief Magistrate Tan Ikram said a pre-sentence report showed Amesbury's actions were the result of "anger and loss of emotional control".

Under Parliamentary rules, a Westminster by-election can be forced if 10% of registered voters in the constituency of an MP jailed or given a suspended custodial sentence sign a petition calling for one.

The recall process can only be triggered once all avenues of appeal against a custodial sentence have been exhausted.

As a result he will still be drawing his £91k salary even for the four weeks he is expected to serve in jail. An announcement about an appeal against his sentence is expected later this week.

Reuters/Phil Noble Suspended Labour MP Mike Amesbury walks past members of the media, outside Chester Magistrates Court in January. He is wearing a red tie and looks glum.Reuters/Phil Noble
Mike Amesbury, pictured after a court appearance in January, was first elected as an MP in 2017

Amesbury won the newly formed seat of Runcorn and Helsby in July's general election, with a majority of more than 14,000 over Reform UK.

He was first elected as MP for Weaver Vale in 2017 and represented the Cheshire constituency before it ceased to exist following last year's boundary changes.

The Labour spokesperson said: "The Labour Party took swift action following Mike Amesbury's completely unacceptable actions and he is no longer a Labour MP or a member of the Labour Party.

"It is right that Mr Amesbury pleaded guilty and has now been sentenced."

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