Britain’s Conservative Party said on Tuesday it had withdrawn support from two parliamentary candidates who are being investigated over alleged bets placed on the timing of next month’s national election.
“As a result of ongoing internal enquiries, we have concluded that we can no longer support Craig Williams or Laura Saunders as parliamentary candidates at the forthcoming general election,” a spokesperson for the party said.
British media reported last week the country’s betting regulator, the Gambling Commission, was looking into allegations of improper betting by a second candidate, Saunders, and her husband, Tony Lee, the party’s campaign director.
Williams, a parliamentary secretary and therefore close aide to British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, said in a video message on social media platform X on Tuesday: “I committed an error of judgment, not an offence.
“I’m fully co-operating with routine inquiries from the Gambling Commission and I intend to clear my name,” he said.
Reuters was unable to reach Saunders or Lee to seek comment.
The party said at the time it had been contacted by the Commission “about a small number of individuals.” It also said Lee had taken a leave of absence from his role.
The Conservative spokesperson said the party had checked with the Gambling Commission to ensure its decision to withdraw support did not compromise its inquiries. The Commission has not named anyone in relation to its investigation.
Betting with inside knowledge potentially a crime
British bookmakers allow bets on politics, and the timing of an election is a popular bet. But placing bets with insider knowledge is a crime.
Sunak, who took most lawmakers and voters by surprise when he announced the election date on July 4, has said he was “incredibly angry” to hear about the allegations.
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The opposition Labour Party said it was a sign of Sunak’s “staggeringly weak leadership” that it had taken him so long to suspend the candidates.
“The Conservatives who sought to line their own pockets by betting on the election date are not fit to be candidates for Parliament,” Labour Party member Jonathan Ashworth said in a statement, demanding Sunak disclose the number of Conservatives who were implicated in the probe and name them.
Senior Conservative minister Michael Gove recently condemned the alleged betting and likened it to ” Partygate,” the ethics scandal that contributed to former prime minister Boris Johnson’s ouster in 2022. That controversy saw politicians and officials hold parties and gatherings in government buildings that contravened lockdown guidance during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It looks like one rule for them and one rule for us,” Gove told the Sunday Times.
Separately, London police said last week they had arrested a police officer working in a special protection unit over alleged bets made on the timing of the election. The BBC at the time reported that the officer worked as one of Sunak’s bodyguards.