Louise
Haigh - Former Transport Secretary
RESIGNATION BBC NEWS 29 NOVEMBER 2024
Louise Haigh has resigned as transport secretary after it emerged she pleaded guilty to a fraud offence a decade ago.
Downing Street has named justice minister Heidi Alexander, external as her replacement.
Haigh has admitted telling police in 2013 she had lost her work mobile phone in a mugging, but later found it had not been taken.
She was given a conditional discharge by magistrates, following the incident which happened before she became an MP.
Haigh's is the first resignation from Sir Keir Starmer's government and the 37-year-old said her appointment as the “youngest ever” female cabinet minister “remains one of the proudest achievements of my life”.
The new transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, returned to the Commons for a second stint as an MP in July this year after standing down in 2018.
She spent more than three years as London’s deputy mayor for transport under Sadiq Khan and was also deputy head of Transport for
London.
News of Haigh's conviction emerged on Thursday evening, in reports by the
Times and
Sky News.
Haigh issued a statement giving her version of the 2013 incident, which happened when she was working as a public policy manager for insurance company Aviva.
She had reported a "terrifying" mugging in London to police and told them her work mobile phone had been among items stolen, but later found the handset in a drawer at home.
Turning on the phone "triggered police attention", she said, she was called in for questioning and advised not to comment by her solicitor, before the matter was taken to magistrates' court for making a a false report to police.
Haigh said: "Under the advice of my solicitor I pleaded guilty – despite the fact this was a genuine mistake from which I did not make any gain."
Magistrates handed down a conditional discharge - the "lowest possible outcome" - six months before becoming an MP in the 2015 general election.
However, the Times claims this row relates to more than one mobile phone being stolen or going missing.
The BBC understands Haigh was unaware of any investigation by her former employer, Aviva, involving more than one mobile phone, as reported by the newspaper.
Aviva is not commenting on the story.
Heidi
Alexander - Transport Secretary
DISCLOSURE
On Friday, Haigh sent a resignation letter, external to Sir Keir, saying she did not want to become a distraction and Labour would be "best served by my supporting you from outside government”.
In response, Sir Keir said Haigh had made “huge strides” as transport secretary to take the rail system back into public ownership, and thanked her for her work.
Whitehall sources told the BBC the transport secretary declared her spent conviction to
Sir Keir when he appointed her to his shadow cabinet in 2020, when the Labour Party was in opposition.
She did not tell the government's propriety and ethics team about it when she became a member of the cabinet after Labour won July's general election.
She believed it was sufficient to have disclosed her spent conviction to Sir Keir when Labour was in opposition, the BBC has been told.
But Downing Street has refused to say what Sir Keir knew about Haigh's conviction before stories about it appeared in the media on Thursday evening.
Questioned for 25 minutes by reporters, the PM's official spokesman would say only that Sir Keir had accepted Haigh's resignation after "further information" emerged.
Spent convictions remain on an individual's criminal record for life, but they do not have to reveal them in job applications, under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act.
A Conservative Party spokesman said: “Louise Haigh has done the right thing in resigning. It is clear she has failed to behave to the standards expected of an MP.
"In her resignation letter, she states that Keir Starmer was already aware of the fraud conviction, which raises questions as to why the prime minister appointed Ms Haigh to Cabinet with responsibility for a £30bn budget?
"The onus is now on Keir Starmer to explain this obvious failure of judgement to the British public."
'ROGUE OPERATOR'
Haigh was responsible for one of the government's flagship policies, the re-nationalisation of the country's rail network under Great British Rail.
However, she was also the first cabinet minister the PM publicly rebuked, over remarks about P&O Ferries last month.
Haigh described P&O Ferries as a "rogue operator" and urged people to boycott the company, sparking a row with the ferry company's parent operation DP World.
When it threatened to boycott a major investment summit in response, Sir Keir said Haigh's comments were "not the view of the government".
Born in 1987 in Sheffield, Haigh studied politics at Nottingham University and law at Birkbeck, University of London.
She worked as a shop steward for the union Unite and as a Metropolitan Police officer in London's Lambeth borough before entering politics.
She has been the MP for Sheffield Heeley since 2015, and held a number of shadow ministerial and shadow cabinet roles before becoming transport secretary when Labour won the election nearly five months ago.
LOUISE HAIGH
Louise Haigh was first elected as the MP for Sheffield Heeley in 2015, and held several junior roles on Mr Corbyn’s front bench before being appointed as shadow Northern
Ireland secretary when Sir Keir took charge, and later as shadow transport secretary.
Before running for Parliament, Ms Haigh, who describes herself as a “proud trade unionist” and stands out among MPs with her brightly-dyed hair, worked for the local council youth service and served as a shop steward for the Unite union. She also volunteered as a special constable in the
Metropolitan
Police.
On 29 November 2021, during the shadow cabinet reshuffle, Haigh was appointed as the Shadow Secretary of State for Transport. She was replaced as Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary by Peter Kyle.
On 25 April 2024, Haigh revealed Labour's plans for the re-nationalisation of British rail, pledging to do this in the first term of a Labour government.
Haigh was one of 36 Labour MPs to nominate Jeremy Corbyn as a candidate in the Labour leadership election of 2015, although she later said she regrets this decision. She then supported and campaigned for Andy Burnham.
In the 2016 Labour leadership election, Haigh supported Owen Smith.
In the 2020 leadership election, Haigh chaired the leadership campaign of Lisa Nandy. She also nominated Angela Rayner for Deputy.
FOSSIL
FOOLS - Geriatric politicians with 'climate-senile' policies will
find in difficult to break away from their corrupt ways, as part time
politicians with two jobs. Their main job being to find paid consultancy
work, rather than craft policies and create statute that works to
protect our voters from lung
cancer, energy shortages and a lack of affordable (sustainable)
housing.
The
'zerophobics' are the undertakers of the political world, sending
millions of ordinary people to an early grave, while loading us with NHS,
hospital and staff costs that would not be needed if we had clean air in
our cities.
Basically,
the longer you are in politics, the more likely you are to be exposed to
bribes, from climate
deniers, mostly fossil fuel and energy companies, looking to keep on
pumping toxic fumes into the atmosphere, so they can keep making money.
The political undertakers are working with them to keep hospitals
stocked with cancer victims, adding to the £Trillions we owe as part of
the national debt. Under Boris and Rishi Sunack, pensioner's saving have
halved in real terms. They are blood sucking vampires, draining what
little you had saved for your retirement.
CONTACT
SIR KEIR & HIS CABINET
Westminster Office
House of Commons
London, SW1A 0AA
Tel: 020 7219 5437
SIR
KEIR STARMER'S LABOUR PARTY CABINET 2024
UK
POLITICS
CONSERVATIVE
PARTY
CO-OPERATIVE
PARTY
DEMOCRAT
UNIONIST PARTY
GREEN
PARTY
LABOUR
PARTY
LIBERAL
DEMOCRATS
PLAID
CYMRU
REFORM
UK
SCOTTISH
NATIONAL PARTY
SINN
FEIN
SOCIAL
DEMOCRATIC AND LABOUR PARTY
UK
INDEPENDENCE PARTY
ULSTER
UNIONIST PARTY
LINKS
& REFERENCE
https://www.