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Commons Speaker: MPs still traumatised and fearful after Amess murder

Sir Lindsay Hoyle was speaking to the PA news agency following the conviction of Ali Harbi Ali for murdering veteran MP Sir David Amess in October.

Ryan Hooper
Monday 11 April 2022 21:45 EDT
Speaker of the House, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, and Sir David Amess (PA)
Speaker of the House, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, and Sir David Amess (PA)

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MPs and political staff remain ā€œtraumatisedā€ by the murder of Sir David Amess, and continue to struggle amid fears for their security, Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle said.

Sir Lindsay said Sir Davidā€™s death last October underlined how much the world had changed in recent years, following the 2016 murder of Labour MP Jo Cox, and the 2017 terror attack on Parliament.

And he said some MPs remain worried about their safety, after Sir David was stabbed more than 20 times by twisted London-born extremist Ali Harbi Ali at a constituency surgery in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex.

Speaking after Ali was convicted at the Old Bailey on Monday, Sir Lindsay told the PA news agency: ā€œWhat I do know is that colleagues are still badly affected.

ā€œPeople have been traumatised by these events, whether thatā€™s the Members of Parliament, staff of the House, or staff of MPs.

ā€œWhat happened on that day affected people in different ways.

ā€œBut I do know it really did leave a lasting thought of vulnerability on everyone, and itā€™s quite right that people do feel vulnerable.

ā€œIt leaves us in this sad situation.ā€

Sir Lindsay called for the ā€œhateā€ in politics to stop in the immediate aftermath of Sir Davidā€™s murder.

It came against a background of criminal convictions handed out to people for sending threats to MPs, such as Jess Phillips, Rosie Cooper and former politician Anna Soubry.

Whatever the political persuasion, there is real hate and anger out there.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle, Commons Speaker

Diane Abbott also said she had seen an increase in the amount of online abuse and threats she received in the six weeks after Sir Davidā€™s death.

Asked whether the situation had since improved, the Commons Speaker said: ā€œItā€™s like a thermometer, it goes up and down.

ā€œSo we have had spikes of hate and anger, and then it eases down a bit.ā€

But he added: ā€œWhatever the political persuasion, there is real hate and anger out there.

ā€œIt really affected MPs more than it did before.

ā€œAnd I would say that weā€™ve got to help and support those MPs who have struggled since that hideous attack.ā€

The trial heard Sir David chose to hold his constituency surgeries at a variety of locations in the community because he wanted to be visible following the coronavirus lockdown.

Sir David was accompanied by two aides on the day he was murdered, one of which witnessed Aliā€™s bloody rampage.

There were no security guards at Belfairs Methodist Church, where he had aimed to meet constituents on October 15, nor were bag searches and knife arches in use.

Sir Lindsay ā€“ who held his own constituency surgery within hours of hearing of the fatal attack on his colleague ā€“ said it was entirely up to MPs to decide on the right approach regarding security.

He said: ā€œWho would have thought this when I first got elected in 1997?

ā€œThere was never a problem. You never gave it a second thought about who was going to walk through the door, who was going to sit down and give you their problems.

ā€œItā€™s the world we live in, and the world has moved on.

ā€œWe are in a more dangerous world.

ā€œAnd thatā€™s why members must choose ā€“ along with their staff ā€“ what they feel comfortable with in the way that they support their constituents.ā€

He cautioned against MPs falling into a ā€œcomfort zoneā€ as time moves on.

He added: ā€œWe cannot afford Sir Davidā€™s death to be in vain, weā€™ve got to keep reminding people, youā€™ve got to keep working on that.

ā€œAnd weā€™ve got to make sure we do the best.ā€

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