Tory MP told to apologise after being found guilty of breaching lobbying rules

 (PA)
(PA)

A Conservative MP has been told to make an apology in the House of Commons after being found guilty of breaching lobbying rules in relation to a company which gave him £10,000.

David Morris, who has represented Morecambe and Lunesdale for the Tories since 2010, accepted the donation from infrastructure firm Aquind Ltd in September 2019, and the following month asked a question in parliament about regulations affecting the company, which was seeking to build a £1.1 billion electricity cable linking the UK and France.

Standards commissioner Kathryn Stone found that the question - which named Aquind as a business in need of “protection” from the government following a change in EU rules - “sought to confer a financial or material benefit on the company”.

And she said that a follow-up email sent by Mr Morris to business secretary Alok Sharma the next day also breached the paid advocacy rule as well as the code of conduct for MPs.

Ms Stone accepted that Mr Morris’s breach was “inadvertent”. But the Commons Standards Committee found that any breach of the paid advocacy rule “must always be regarded as a serious matter” and recommended a personal statement of apology in the chamber.

The commissioner was critical of Mr Morris’s response to her investigation, which was “regrettable and disrespectful of the House’s system of standards”.

During the investigation, the MP “repeatedly questioned the commissioner’s remit and her right to consult other officials” and “suggested that the commissioner had deliberately changed the focus of her investigation in order to justify its continuation or conclusions”, the report stated.

But the report added that he had subsequently acknowledged that his communications with Ms Stone were “legalistic, argumentative and … combative” and apologised for his approach, citing personal issues which had made him “extremely stressed” at the time of the investigation.

Mr Morris had declared the contribution from Aquind to his election campaign funds in the register of MPs’ interests. But the paid advocacy rule bars MPs from taking any steps in parliament, including tabling questions and approaching ministers, within a six-month period after a gift from an individual or company which might benefit from them.

The report on his case was released on the day Mr Morris announced the birth of his daughter Chloe.