Europe

The British prime minister accepts the resignation of his minister Williamson due to harassment “with great sadness”

The British prime minister accepts the resignation of his minister Williamson due to harassment "with great sadness"

Nov. 9 () –

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has accepted the resignation of Minister of State without Portfolio Gavin Williamson, who is part of the current UK Executive.

In a letter from the British administration, Sunak thanked Williamson for resigning and showed his support.

“I accept your resignation with great sadness. I am aware that your commitment to successive conservative governments and the party has been unwavering. I support your decision to step aside and I understand why you have done it,” reads the letter signed by the first Minister.

“I want to thank you for your personal support and your loyalty. (…) I also want to express my gratitude for the work you have done for this government,” Sunak concluded.

Williamson has resigned from his post on Tuesday after a complaint against him for alleged harassment and intimidation against an official during his time as defense minister.

The complaint was made public on Monday in the newspaper ‘The Guardian’. A former senior official assured, after years of keeping silent about Williamson’s alleged comments against him when he was Defense Minister (2017-2019), that the politician even told him to cut his throat.

Williamson, who in recent days has been under public scrutiny after several text messages were leaked with insults towards her then-boss Wendy Morton due to disagreements in the framework of the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, has held relevant positions in the previous executives as Minister of Defense and as Minister of Education.

In his resignation letter, published this Tuesday on his Twitter profile, the minister without portfolio in the Sunak government has refuted how his “past conduct” has been characterized, although he has defended his departure by assuring that these accusations were becoming a distraction for the Executive.

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