Calls for Bristol Tory candidate to be suspended over alleged election betting
The Bristol North West candidate is being looked into by the Gambling Commission
Last updated 20th Jun 2024
A senior Conservative says it would be "reprehensible" to use inside information to bet on the General Election date, as the party's candidate for Bristol North West is investigated for an alleged breach.
Tory candidate Laura Saunders is facing a Gambling Commission investigation into alleged betting offences.
News of that investigation followed the arrest of one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's police protection officers and a Gambling Commission investigation into his parliamentary aide Craig Williams also over betting allegations.
Housing Secretary Michael Gove told the BBC: "If people have used inside information to place bets, that is deeply wrong.
"What I can't do is sort of get too much into the detail of the case while an investigation is going on.
"But I can talk about the broad principle and you're absolutely right, it's reprehensible."
Responses to the allegations
In response to the latest allegations about Bristol North West candidate Ms Saunders, a Conservative spokesman said: "We have been contacted by the Gambling Commission about a small number of individuals.
"As the Gambling Commission is an independent body, it wouldn't be proper to comment further, until any process is concluded."
The Gambling Commission said: "Currently the commission is investigating the possibility of offences concerning the date of the election.
"This is an ongoing investigation, and the commission cannot provide any further details at this time."
Ms Saunders was previously the head of the international department at the Conservative Party, working with London embassies and the Tories' sister parties overseas.
Ms Saunders had also previously worked on organising campaign visits in the 2017 and 2019 elections.
Lib Dems pressure Tories to suspend the candidate
Liberal Democrats deputy leader Daisy Cooper said: "Rishi Sunak must find his backbone and suspend Laura Saunders from the Conservative party whilst this investigation is ongoing.
"It would be an utter disgrace if Conservative politicians were shown to be more focused on turning a quick buck rather than the needs of the country.
"The Conservative party has proven itself utterly unfit for office. Voters are sick to the back teeth of this endless carousel of chaos, sleaze and scandal.
"People across the country are crying out for change and that is why in many areas they are backing the Liberal Democrats to get a strong local champion that will take their issues right to the heart of Parliament and not take them for granted any longer."
Leaders face TV grilling tonight
Elsewhere on Thursday, Mr Sunak will join three other party leaders in taking part in a BBC Question Time special.
The two-hour programme will see each leader appear one by one to face questions from the audience.
Labour's Sir Keir Starmer will also take part along with Scotland's First Minister John Swinney for the SNP and Sir Ed Davey for the Liberal Democrats.
The latest televised election event comes after YouGov said the Conservatives are projected to slump to their "lowest seat tally in the party's almost 200-year history" at the election.
Bad news for Conservatives in latest polls
YouGov said its latest study projects Labour to secure 425 seats, the Tories 108, the Liberal Democrats 67, the SNP 20, Reform UK five, Plaid Cymru four and the Green Party two.
It noted such a scenario would hand Sir Keir a 200-seat majority while it added Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is "likely" to win in Clacton.
YouGov used a technique known as multi-level regression and post-stratification (MRP) to model the outcome of the election in every constituency across Britain.
It said the estimated seat projections were based on modelled responses from 36,161 adults in England and Wales and 3,818 in Scotland between June 11 and 18.