Crikey- this old chestnut again. We’ve had recent posts about this when AB was standing for Makerfield by election, supported by Haigh, and then posters debating who might he choose to be in his cabinet. High paid the price when it was first brought to public attention by the press in 2024 when she decided to resign from her post. Are people bringing this up because even though this is already in the public domain she needs to be punished again? I don't hold that view in all the. circumstances that she requires further punishment or that she should not be able to be in government.
Louise Haigh, the MP for Sheffield Heeley, is the former UK Secretary of State for Transport. She resigned from the Cabinet in November 2024 after it was revealed she had pleaded guilty to fraud by false representation in 2014.
Tranfromjustice.org.uk: One in four people have a criminal record. Where are we going to get good MPs if we disallow 1 in 4 people and anyone who has a spent conditional discharge ?
Conviction Details
The Incident In 2013, while working for Aviva, Ms. Haigh was mugged and reported to the police various. items that the muggers had stolen, one of which was her work phone had been stolen. She later found that the phone and switched it on. Her employer had already issued a work phone replacement. She did not contact the police to inform them she had found it. Unbeknownst to Haigh, switching on the phone triggered a police alert that the phone was in use and they brought Haigh in for questioning. Her Duty solicitor advised her to say ‘no comment’, as most solicitors might in such circumstances.
The Conviction Police referred the case to the Crown Prosecution Service, and in 2014—six months before the 2015 General Election—she pleaded guilty to making a false report to the police, ie she had originally reported the phone stolen when mugged but did not update the police it had been found to take it off the stolen phone register. She received a conditional discharge, which is the lowest possible legal penalty
The Resignation Although the conviction was spent and did not prevent her from being an MP, the press dug up this history and published. Haigh stepped down as Transport Secretary in November 2024, stating that the resurfaced issue would act as a distraction from the government's agenda