The UK newspaper Mail on Sunday (24) published an article on Sunday (24) which featured an unidentified Conservative MP, accusing him of trying to seduce Labor vice-president MP Angela Rainer. Distract Prime Minister Boris Johnson while he is in Parliament.
The Conservative Party’s accusation against Rainer is that Johnson crossed his legs and untied his legs as he walked into Parliament to answer questions from delegates.
The Mail on Sunday article claims that the trick is similar to the character of actress Sharon Stone in the 1992 film “Basic Instinct”. During the interrogation, she crosses her legs and disrupts the balance of the men in the room. While in Johnson’s House, the newspaper text states that Rainer, a British MP, did the act “in full dress”.
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Rainer, who is accused of crossing his legs, said Johnson’s supporters were using perverse and distrustful slander.
“I have been accused of using a scheme to divert the attention of the helpless Prime Minister by wearing a woman, legs and clothes. Women in politics face masculinity and misogyny every day, and with me it is no different, ”she said.
Rainer hails from a working class family in the north of England. He dropped out of school at the age of 16 and entered politics through the union movement.
Johnson attended an elite private school, the University of Eden and Oxford. Rainer sometimes has trouble avoiding criticism of him in parliamentary debates.
Johnson criticized the article. On Twitter, she said: “I do not agree with Angela Rainer on every political issue. I respect her as a Member of Parliament.
On Monday, Johnson said he contacted Rayner about the article. He re-criticized the text, calling it sexual, misogynistic and scary.
The Prime Minister said that if the viceroy who was compared to the movie “Basic Instinct” is identified, he will face “the horror of the earth”.
“This kind of thing is completely intolerable,” Johnson told reporters.
Another MP, Carolyn Knox, a member of the Conservative Party and chair of the Committee on Women and Equality, said she had asked House Speaker Lindsay Hoyle to pass a censorship resolution on journalist Glenn Owen, who wrote the article.
Hoyle says he invited the newspaper editor to discuss the article. According to him, freedom of the press is one of the pillars of democracy, but publishing misogynistic and hurtful comments only serves to motivate women who want to run for office, which is harmful to all.
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