Indian-origin MP Lisa Nandy took centre-stage in the UK Parliament when she confronted British Prime Minister Theresa May for failing to act over sexual abuse cover-up she had informed her about three years ago.
Lisa Nandy's intervention during the weekly Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs) in the House of Commons came amid an intensifying storm around cases of sexual misconduct involving British politicians.
The Labour party MP for Wigan yesterday claimed that she had raised the issue of party whips, in charge of discipline within political ranks, misusing knowledge of sexual abuse cases to their advantage in 2014 – when May was UK home secretary in the David Cameron-led government.
"Three years ago, I brought evidence to her (May) in this House that whips had used information about sexual abuse to demand loyalty from MPs. I warned her at the time that unless real action was taken we risked repeating those injustices again today," Nandy said during PMQs.
"On three occasions, I asked her to act and on three occasions she did not," she claimed, demanding that the British prime minister take "concrete action" to tackle the issue now.
May, who had opened the day's parliamentary proceedings with a statement on the issue of sexual misconduct involving political leaders, said that she had been holding a series of meetings to set up a "common, transparent, independent" grievance procedure.
Responding to Nandy’s question, May indicated that she did not recall the three instances being referred to but was determined to take firm action.