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Did Louise Haigh really need to resign?

No one is buying Labour's attempt to be squeaky clean. Credit: Getty

December 1, 2024 - 8:00am

For a man with little flair for performance, Keir Starmer seems to be courting drama during his first few months in office as prime minister. But while the previous passes for glasses scandals at least had a bit of glamour to them, this week’s transgression involving former transport minister Louise Haigh is a little, well, dull.

Getting well ahead of the headlines, Haigh announced her resignation earlier this week. Her crime was a minor one: telling fibs to the police about her phone being stolen 10 years ago. After what she described as a “terrifying” mugging, Haigh says she thought her phone had been nicked, only to find it at her home. She later pled guilty to a charge of misleading the police.

We all know that the papers love a good backstory to pick at — and perhaps Haigh was right when she claimed in her resignation letter that her minor criminal offence would “inevitably be a distraction”. But one can’t help but wonder: should Haigh really have had to give up her brief over a minor incident that happened a decade ago?

The fact that Labour stood by Lord Alli, whose behaviour was far more ethically dubious than Haigh’s, should raise a lot of questions. But then again, maybe there was more to it: Haigh was, after all, a former shop steward MP from Sheffield who had embarrassed Starmer by offering her support to P&O Ferries workers and nationalising the railways. Maybe this was simply an easy way of getting rid of a trouble-making minister.

However, it’s also true that Haigh was not doing a good job in the transport department. Her declaration of love for Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, including labelling legitimate opposition to them merely stoking the “culture wars”, is enough to make many people happy to see the back of her. (Sadly, her replacement, Heidi Alexander, is even worse.) But this holier-than-thou approach that Starmer’s government seems keen to adopt is a problem. Most voters don’t care that an MP has a colourful past — lots of them voted for Boris Johnson — and Starmer will get no brownie points for Haigh’s exit. What we do care about is our democratic demands being met, and that politicians focus on doing the job they were elected to do.

If Starmer’s goal is to create the illusion of an upstanding government, sacking all his staff who have made mistakes isn’t going to work. It’s perhaps unfortunate that this resignation took place in the same week that a Labour MP has won a victory to legalise assisted dying, a move that many in parliament and the public feel is morally questionable.

Indeed, it rather neatly reveals the superficiality of Starmer’s brave new administration. On the outside, everyone is keen to look squeaky clean. But when it comes down to the substance — on everything from keeping pensioners warm to raising children to popping off the terminally ill — the shine is beginning to rub off.


Ella Whelan is a freelance journalist, commentator and author of What Women Want: Fun, Freedom and an End to Feminism.

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Jake Raven
Jake Raven
20 days ago

Get yer facts right before writing an article. Haigh is a crook, with form. Allegedly this was not an isolated incident and she had form for losing her phones, and her previous employer reported her to the police.
She was convicted of fraud, and should have been sacked for that alone. On top of that, she was rubbish at her job and should never have been appointed in the first place, the Kneeler must have been desperate. Finally anyone with hair that colour cannot be taken seriously in a professional role.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
19 days ago
Reply to  Jake Raven

Correct on all points including the final one.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
21 days ago

I suggest you look at the detail that suggests that Aviva had her down for “multiple phone-related incidents” and reported her to the police.

Arkadian Arkadian
Arkadian Arkadian
21 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Do share. I have been wondering what had been going on there.

AC Harper
AC Harper
21 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

I suspect the ‘fraud’ conviction was just a handy excuse the get rid of someone whose actions were not part of the ‘team’ approach. The pay deals for ASLEF railway workers were not agreed with the Treasury first allegedly.
You could argue that this is the consequence of Labour having a large majority – people feel free to depart from party discipline if they are so inclined.

Edward Seymour
Edward Seymour
21 days ago
Reply to  AC Harper

You didn’t need inverted commas around fraud I think. It seems it was Aviva who reported her to the Police for more than one telephone.

Jake Raven
Jake Raven
20 days ago
Reply to  AC Harper

She was convicted of fraud for more than one incident of phone ‘misappropriation’. If she didn’t declare her conviction when she took up the cabinet role, she knowingly lied. If she did declare it, Two Tier should follow her out the door.
How can a convicted fraudster be in responsible for taxpayers’ money.

Peter B
Peter B
21 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Quite. The author demonstrates both touching naivete in believing Louise Haigh’s latest version of events without question and a complete lack of research into the background details you and I area already aware of. She lied once already. It’s far from certain Haigh’s version two is the complete and final explanation of the events.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
19 days ago
Reply to  Peter B

Ella Whelan is a teenager who works/worked for Spiked.

Adrian Smith
Adrian Smith
20 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

There was clearly a lot more to the story than she has let on or, as the author says, this seems far too minor to resign over. There is also the fact that she had worked for the Met as a special so she knew better.
That her replacement is even worse is the big problem with this government – is Starmer / Reeves were to resign, who would replace them that would not be even worse!

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
19 days ago
Reply to  Adrian Smith

Believe me, her employer would not have referred the case to the police unless there was more to it (the suggestion is multiple incidents of a similar, fraudulent nature). The usual procedure is to issue a warning or dismiss.

Alan Osband
Alan Osband
20 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Claimed the insurance and passed them on to Lord Alli ( for Two Tier)?

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
21 days ago

Starmer could not afford to carry “Louise from Aviva” as well as “Rachel from Accounts”. This a real shame as I would have loved the emerging witicisms. A new series of The Office would also be fun.

Philip Stott
Philip Stott
21 days ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

“Rachel from Accounts”
Very good. I’m not going to be able to see her now without that line running through my mind 🙂

William Cameron
William Cameron
21 days ago
Reply to  Philip Stott

She was Rachel from the Call Centre – no way could she qualify as an accountant.

Francisco Menezes
Francisco Menezes
20 days ago

CRS- Customer Relation Services.

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
21 days ago

It’s the sort of silly scandal that can easily distract government, opposition and press.

The press tends to be most annoying a out things like this and the opposition jumps on the bandwagon of scoring a few cheap political points.

Save your energy folks. HM Government have plenty of real problems to deal with. HM Opposition have lots of work to do in developing a coherent right of centre strategy. There are far bigger and more interesting frauds and failing for the ladies and gentlemen of the press to chase.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
21 days ago

The journalists job is done, allowing the humourists work to begin.

J Boyd
J Boyd
21 days ago

Surely the real question is why the Police prosecuted someone who made a mistake after being the victim of a crime.

If she genuinely thought her phone had been stolen and then found she still had it, then the prosecution was scandalous.

Ben Jones
Ben Jones
21 days ago
Reply to  J Boyd

I remember one west London robbery squad issuing £80 fixed penalty notices for wasting police time due to the ubiquity of false reporting (for insurance purposes).
Mistake? The court clearly disagreed.
Furthermore, there’s some doubt about the material Ms Haigh supplied to the police after the ‘robbery’ (metadata on photos) and it’s also reported she was subsequently ‘let go’ from her job.
Should she have resigned? Not my call. Shall we (as usual) blame the police? Oh, go on. Why not?

Peter B
Peter B
21 days ago
Reply to  J Boyd

But you will note that she never challenged it as an unsafe conviction. And she now has access to the renowned legal capabilities of Keir Starmer to help fight her corner and right this alleged wrong. But she still did not. Surely that must tell you something ?
Even the most cursory background research here will tell you there’s a little more to this story than Louise Haigh is telling you.

J Boyd
J Boyd
20 days ago
Reply to  Peter B

If that is the case, and she was trying to defraud her insurance company, then of course the prosecution and conviction were justified.

And that would reflect exceptionally badly on Starmer.

So we should be told the full story, not least to demonstrate that the Police acted properly.

However I have not heard Labour clarify the circumstances yet.

Peter B
Peter B
20 days ago
Reply to  J Boyd

And when have you ever heard Labour “clarify the circumstances” ?
Their official policy is “greater transparency”.
Their actual policy is obfuscation and delay. Throw out a minimum, incomplete and slightly inconsistent amount of information and hope that everyone “moves on” and loses interest.
Quite why you would choose by default to doubt the police and legal system when Louise Hague herself voluntarily pleaded guilty baffles me.
You might also want to ask yourself whether it is any coincidence that Louise Haigh’s current (rev 2) explanation of events involves playing the victim card and whether there is any supporting evidence for her latest version of events.
And once again, if she were a victim of injustice, why would an ex-DPP (Starmer) not be fighting her corner ?

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
19 days ago
Reply to  J Boyd

I have a bridge to sell you.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
21 days ago

Starmers govt is already beginning to feel like " The end days ”
He certainly cannot continue as he has begun and still over 4 years left !

RR RR
RR RR
21 days ago

She has clearly not told the full story when getting selected for the Shadow Cabinet.
So I suspect there is more to this than ‘didn’t fess up when she found the phone’

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
21 days ago

Truly horrifying. Like the blurb from the back of a paperback, only one we have no choice but to read

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
21 days ago

What voters want, in a government of any hue, is competence.

Unfortunately, there is currently no indication that Starmer and his crew possess any measurable amount of competence, at all.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
21 days ago

This is what’s particularly disconcerting to the public at large – the abject quality of individuals finding their way into government ranks. It can only lead to rank government.

Jack Martin Leith
Jack Martin Leith
21 days ago

Louise Haigh’s replacement, Heidi Alexander, is much better qualified for the job (Deputy Mayor for Transport at Greater London Authority involved in Crossrail / Elizabeth line opening etc.) so why wasn’t she given it in the first place?

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
21 days ago

I think the “popping off the terminally ill” one (as the author puts it) will prove quite popular. Having a government do something the people actually want is something of a novelty.

John Tyler
John Tyler
21 days ago

EW is correct: too many of the cabinet and minters are sanctimonious, self-satisfied ‘activists’. This, of course, is not a problem limited only to the Labour government, but applies to a great number of our educated elite. They remind me of a car sticker from a few years back: “Ask a teenager while he still knows everything.”

William Jackson
William Jackson
21 days ago

Lying to the police is now a minor crime? Being convicted of a previous or not crime is not enough to cause a resignation from senior government office? And if it was a Conservative MP?

Will K
Will K
20 days ago

After any sentence is served, it is unreasonable to extend punishment for a lifetime.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
20 days ago

A minor affair of ‘non-disclosure to the media’ has only revealed the weakness of the current British goverment- cowardly and amoral too.
They find their mirror in the Scholz government in Germany and together are going to get into deep water with the Trump administration.

alan bennett
alan bennett
20 days ago

Ethically dubious and multiple fraudulent criminal actions are two different kettles of rotting fish.
That you cannot see the difference, precludes you from judging them, let alone writing about it.

Mike Smith
Mike Smith
20 days ago

Yes, she needed to resign. She seems to have ‘lost’ two phones.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
19 days ago
Reply to  Mike Smith

Three, according to The Times.

Naren Savani
Naren Savani
20 days ago

This journalist needs to research her subject before labelling it a “minor crime”

Kiddo Cook
Kiddo Cook
20 days ago

There was no shine to be rubbed off……