SNP MP Patrick Grady is facing suspension from the House of Commons after an allegation of sexual misconduct was upheld by a parliamentary probe.
The independent expert panel recommended that Mr Grady should be suspended from the House for two days for making an “unwanted sexual advance” to a member of party staff at a work social event in a pub in 2016.
Mr Grady was also ordered to make a public apology in the chamber and to say sorry privately to the person who complained.
However the length of the suspension was shortened because, the panel said, the complainant “breached confidentiality repeatedly” in an attempt to discredit Mr Brady leading to “intrusive press activities and abuse on social media”.
An investigation by Kathryn Stone, the parliamentary commissioner for standards, upheld a claim that Mr Grady had made an unwanted advance “that included touching and stroking of the complainant’s neck, hair and back”.
The MP did not appeal the decision.
Mr Grady was found to have breached parliament’s sexual misconduct policy.
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The panel considering his sanction concluded: “An unwanted physical touching, with sexual intent, from a senior MP to a junior member of staff, even on a single occasion, is a significant breach of the policy.
“It must be marked by some period of suspension from the House.”
It also took into account the MP’s “genuine remorse for his actions, that they were not repeated once rebuffed, and his efforts to address his behaviour since the incident”.
The recommendation for a suspension must be agreed to by the House of Commons.
The findings mark the latest chapter in a series of misconduct claims linked to parliament.
The Sunday Times reported earlier this year that 56 MPs face allegations ranging from making sexually inappropriate comments to more serious wrongdoing.