Ken Maginnis: Peer faces 18-month ban over homophobic bullying claims
- Published
Lord Maginnis of Drumglass should be suspended from the Lords for at least 18 months over bullying and harassment claims, a standards watchdog has said.
The independent Ulster Unionist broke the rules in his conduct towards four people and used "homophobic and offensive" language, it was found.
The Lords Conduct Committee ordered the ex-MP and soldier to take "behaviour training" or face a longer ban.
But he told the ´óÏó´«Ã½ he would refuse to do so.
Asked if that would mean a greater punishment, he said: "So be it."
Lord Maginnis denied bullying and harassment and called the committee's report "ridiculous", adding that he was the victim of a campaign against him, involving the LGBT rights charity Stonewall.
But Stonewall said he should "step up and accept responsibility for his behaviour and apologise to those he has hurt".
Homophobic remarks
Defending his stance, Lord Maginnis told ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Ulster: "I've held responsible positions all my life,.
"At 83 years of age, I'm not going to be dictated to in this way."
Complaints against Lord Maginnis were made by Parliamentary security officer Christian Bombolo, SNP MP Hannah Bardell and Labour MPs Luke Pollard and Toby Perkins.
He was accused of verbally abusing Mr Bombolo when asked to show his security pass in January, with Ms Bardell saying he became rude and aggressive when she intervened.
Ms Bardell later told the House of Commons it was "one of the worst cases of abuse of security staff" she had witnessed.
At the time, The Huffington Post website quoted Lord Maginnis as saying in response: "Queers like Ms Bardell don't particularly annoy me."
It was also claimed that, in February, he sent an email about other parliamentarians containing a homophobic subject line.
And he was accused of making homophobic remarks about Ms Bardell and Mr Pollard at a breakfast meeting hosted by the All-Party Parliamentary Group for the Armed Forces in March.
'Sackable offence'
The Lords Commissioner for Standards, Lucy Scott-Moncrief, who carried out an investigation into Lord Maginnis, previously recommended a ban of nine months.
He appealed against this, but the committee found he had shown "very little insight into the impact of his behaviour on the complainants, and no remorse for the upset he had caused".
Instead, it added, he had "portrayed himself as a victim of a conspiracy… and continued to refer to the complainants in a disobliging and sometimes offensive manner".
Following the publication of , Ms Bardell told ´óÏó´«Ã½ Scotland's Drivetime with John Beattie that she had received death threats after speaking in the Commons about Lord Maginnis's behaviour.
She added that it was "total nonsense" to suggest she was behind a "conspiracy" against the peer.
Ms Bardell also said she was "disappointed" by the recommendation of a ban for Lord Maginnis and that "in any normal workplace anywhere in the UK, this would be a sackable offence".
Lord Maginnis, who was the Ulster Unionist MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone from 1983 to 2001 having previously served in the Ulster Defence Regiment, became a life peer in 2001.
The House of Lords will decide on 7 December whether to bring the recommended ban into force.
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- Published12 June 2015