Labour health minister sacked over WhatsApp messages

Labour health minister sacked over WhatsApp messages

Health minister Andrew Gwynne has been sacked after a newspaper revealed he sent a string of offensive and abusive WhatsApp messages.

The MP for Gorton and Denton was also suspended from the Labour Party after the Mail on Sunday reported the messages, which insulted constituents, fellow MPs and councillors.

A government spokesperson said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was “determined to uphold high standards of those in public office” and “will not hesitate to take action against any minister who fails to meet these standards”.

Gwynne said on X that he was sorry for any offence caused by the “badly misjudged” comments.

He added that he understood the prime minister and Labour’s decision, and “while very sad to have been suspended, will support them in any way I can”.

A Labour spokesperson said Gwynne, 50, has been “administratively suspended” as a party member as it investigates “comments made in this WhatsApp group in line with the Labour Party’s rules and procedures”.

“Swift action will be taken if individuals are found to have breached the high standards expected of them as Labour Party members,” the spokesperson added.

In messages seen by the Mail on Sunday, Gwynne said he hoped a 72-year-old woman would soon be dead after she wrote to her local councillor about bin collections.

The councillor shared the woman’s letter with Gwynne and other Labour figures in a WhatsApp group called Trigger Me Timbers, the newspaper reported.

The newspaper said he also joked about a constituent being “mown down” by a truck.

Gwynne also reportedly posted sexist comments about Angela Rayner, and racist remarks about Labour MP Diane Abbott.

The Conservatives said the messages showed there is a “rot” in the party that “needs fixing”.

“There is a clear contempt for pensioners in the Labour Party,” said Tory party co-chair Nigel Huddleston.

“Andrew Gwynne should not remain a member of the Labour Party – they need to act.”

Gwynne was first elected as a Labour MP in 2005, representing the Denton and Reddish constituency. He was elected as MP for Gorton and Denton last year following a constituency boundary change.

He is the third MP to leave the government since last summer’s election, coming after the departures of Tulip Siddiq as Treasury minister in January and Louise Haigh as transport secretary last November.

Siddiq stepped down over allegations linked to her aunt’s political movement in Bangladesh, while Haigh resigned after it emerged that she had pleaded guilty to a criminal offence related to the reported theft of a work mobile phone.

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