The 65-year-old admitted that after stumbling on the site by mistake, he came back and entered it a second time as he waited to vote in the room, a decision he described as “deliberate” and “my biggest crime”. “What I did was completely wrong. I was wrong. I was an idiot. “I lost my mind,” he added. His actions have sparked a debate over standards of conduct in Parliament’s buildings. Kwasi Kwarteng, the Minister of Business, insisted on Sunday that there was no culture of bigotry but only a few “bad apples”. The minister said the House of Commons should not lock all its bars in a “US-type lock” to prevent misconduct. “I think the idea that we’re going to get into some kind of US-type lockdown in the House of Commons where there are no bars, I think it’s a huge overreaction,” Kwarteng told Times Radio. “I think people generally behave responsibly. “But sometimes one or two people do not, as in any other social sphere.” The Claas Dominator is one of the most popular combine harvesters in Europe and was first built in Germany in the 1970s. Mr. Parish has been photographed standing in one of the vehicles. Some other agricultural machinery companies also market products such as mowers and mowers used in the harvest and use the “Dominator” brand name. Mr Slade said the terms of the search had not been personally confirmed by Mr Parish.
“It’s very sad to see him leave”
“Neil has always been very supportive of our voters, our local union, local charities and me and my family, we know him both socially and professionally,” Slade said. “I have never had any concerns about his behavior and I consider Neil to be absolutely true. I saw his interview with the BBC, which was very cordial, in which he said that he was wrong and he was sorry. “I had a conversation with him in which he said very similar things.” The chairman of the jury was first suspended by the Conservative Party on Friday because two colleagues said they saw him looking at the explicit content on his mobile phone in the House of Commons and at a jury hearing. His resignation the next day sparked by-elections at the Tories safe haven in Tiverton and Honiton. Mr Slade added: “It was a very foolish thing to do and now he is doing what he considers honorable to do and the local association supports his decision. “We are very sorry to see him leave, he is an excellent MP in the constituency for many years and we will have a difficult job to replace him.” Mr Slade said he believed Mr Parish would miss more than his role as chair of the Select Committee on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, as it was a far-reaching goal he enjoyed as a farmer.