Parish – the Tiverton and Honiton MP in East Devon – admitted to examining adult material twice and that the second case was intentional. Speaking to the BBC, he said he had initially stumbled upon the site while searching for tractor information, but later returned to the site on purpose. And he admitted, “I was not proud of what I did.” The 65-year-old former farmer said: “The situation was that, quite funny, it was a tractor I was looking at and I came across another site that had a very similar name. “And I watched it for a while, something I should not have done.” Parish said the first case took place in the House of Commons, but later deliberately returned to the same area while in the adjacent voting lobby. But she insisted she never did so with the intention of seeing women MPs. “My crime – my biggest crime is that in another case – I went a second time,” he said. “It was intentional.” Stephen Fry was quick to laugh at the latest developments in the story, posting a link to a tractor-related website on Twitter with the caption: “I should not click on it, but I can not restrain myself …” David Badiel, meanwhile, wrote on Twitter: “As funny as it was, it was a tractor I was looking at,” I hope it becomes a national phrase. He then shared a video from Parish’s interview, comparing it to Little Britain, and posted another tweet about a moving children’s book on tractors. Register Richard Osman pointed out: “” Tory Neil Parish “is an anagram of” parties hornily “. The signs were all there. “ See the best of the other reactions below … Parish’s resignation came amid growing criticism of the Conservative Party’s slow response to a scandal. His name was given to Leader Chris Heaton-Harris on Tuesday afternoon (April 26th) by two female Tory MPs who saw him watching porn. But there was no announcement of any action in the case until the afternoon of the next day, when the story reached the press. Heaton-Harris first referred the case to parliament’s Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme, which deals with allegations of harassment and intimidation by the MPS and parliamentary staff. It was only three days after the initial complaint – during which other MPs were found to be the subject of Westminster’s inaccurate rumors about the identity of the culprit – that Paris was finally named and referred to a model investigation.