Dominic Raab has resigned as the UK’s deputy prime minister and as justice secretary after months of allegations about bullying behaviour in the Ministry of Justice and other departments.
The senior
Conservative MP had faced multiple formal complaints over his dealings
with civil servants, including claims, that he bullied and belittled
staff, driving some to tears or causing them to vomit before meetings.
The
resignation is a major blow to Rishi Sunak who will face questions for
allowing Raab to stay in his post while an investigation by Adam Tolley
KC, a leading employment barrister, was held.
In his
resignation letter, Raab said the conclusions of a report into his
conduct set a “dangerous precedent” but stressed he wanted to “keep his
word” after undertaking to quit if it found against him.
He
revealed details of the report, which was passed to Rishi Sunak on
Thursday morning, April 20 saying “it dismissed all but two of the
claims levelled against me”.
He added those findings were “flawed and set a dangerous precedent for the conduct of good government”.
Raab
defended ministers being able to “give direct critical feedback on
briefings and submissions … in order to set the standards and drive the
reform the public expect of us”.
But he stressed he was
“genuinely sorry for any unintended stress or offence that any officials
felt, as a result of the pace, standards and challenge that I brought
to the Ministry of Justice”.
Raab claimed that Tolley’s report found he had “not once, in four and a half years, sworn or shouted at anyone, let alone thrown anything or otherwise physically intimidated anyone, nor intentionally sought to belittle anyone”.
He
appeared to criticise the case against him, saying that “in setting the
threshold for bullying so low, this inquiry has set a dangerous
precedent”.
Raab added: “It will encourage spurious complaints
against ministers, and have a chilling effect on those driving change
on behalf of your government – and ultimately the British people.”
Raab
said he had raised with Sunak “a number of improprieties” about the
review into his conduct, including “the systemic leaking of skewed and
fabricated claims to the media” in breach of the inquiry rules and civil
service code.
He also hit out at the “coercive removal” by a
senior official of “dedicated” private office staff last October, adding
that both issues should be independently reviewed.
Raab added Sunak could “count on my support from the backbenches”.


Raab’s
enforced ministerial departure over claims of bullying is the second
since Sunak became prime minister on 25 October. In early November,
Gavin Williamson resigned as a Cabinet Office minister after
allegations, revealed by the Guardian, that he told a senior civil
servant to “slit your throat” while he was defence secretary, and the
emergence of abusive messages to a Tory colleague.
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