Theresa May under pressure to sack Priti Patel after details of more Israel meetings emerge

International Development Secretary Priti Patel held an undisclosed meeting with Israel's prime minister while on holiday
PA
Tom Powell8 November 2017
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Theresa May is under increasing pressure to remove Priti Patel from her cabinet after it emerged she held two further unauthorised meetings with Israeli officials.

The International Development Secretary has already been forced to apologise for 12 undisclosed meetings held during a “family holiday” in the country this August - one of which was with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

It is now understood Ms Patel met Israeli public security minister Gilad Erdan in Parliament on September 7, and foreign ministry official Yuval Rotem in New York on September 18.

Downing Street was reportedly told about the New York breakfast on Monday, but only learned about the meeting with Mr Erdan on Tuesday.

Theresa May is under pressure to remove Priti Patel from her cabinet role
PA

It is understood that no British officials were present and like her meetings in Israel, she did not follow procedure and report them to the Foreign Office or Government.

She was accompanied at all the meetings bar one in Israel by honorary president of the Conservative Friends for Israel lobbying group Lord Polak.

Labour has already demanded an investigation into Ms Patel's meetings, claiming they involved four "serious breaches" of the ministerial code.

A senior Conservative told the Independent: “Ministers must uphold collective responsibility and mustn’t engage in activity that undermines the collective work of the Cabinet."

He added: “If the Prime Minister wanted to sack a minister for this kind of thing she could."

Before the extra meetings were revealed, Downing Street insisted Mrs May continued to have confidence in Ms Patel, who is currently in Africa with International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, after giving her a dressing down on Monday over her trip to Israel.

Number 10 confirmed that Ms Patel had discussed the possibility of UK aid being used to support medical assistance for refugees from the Syrian civil war arriving in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

However the Prime Minister's official spokesman was unable to say whether she had explained when she met Mrs May that the scheme would have involved supplying funding to the Israeli army.

Priti Patel's cabinet future appears to be in the balance
PA

In a letter to Mrs May, Labour's shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Trickett said she should either call in her independent adviser on ministerial standards, Sir Alex Allen, or "state publicly and explain your full reasons for why Priti Patel retains your confidence despite clear breaches of the ministerial code".

Mr Trickett said there were "strong grounds" to believe that Ms Patel had broken the code's requirements for openness, collective responsibility, honesty and performing only those duties allocated to them by the PM.

Labour sought to force Ms Patel to explain herself in the Commons by tabling an urgent question, but it was left to Middle East Minister Alistair Burt to answer as MPs were told she had left on the trip to Africa.

He said Foreign Office officials in Israel had only become aware of her visit on August 24, after she was already in the country.

The Prime Minister was forced to remind Ms Patel of her obligations as a minister after it emerged that she took time out from a family holiday to meet Mr Netanyahu, other politicians, businesses and charities during a visit to Israel between August 13 and 25.

On returning from her trip, Ms Patel commissioned Department for International Development (DfID) work on disability, humanitarian and development partnerships between Israel and the UK.

Ms Patel only made Mrs May aware of the meetings on Friday, more than two months after they took place, when reports began to emerge of talks she held with a politician and a disability charity.

The minister has apologised and admitted a "lack of precision" for suggesting last week that Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson knew about the trip, and that only two meetings had taken place.

Mrs May also took steps to tighten the ministerial code, asking Whitehall's top civil servant, Sir Jeremy Heywood, to look at how it can be clarified.

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