In April 2022, Parish had the Conservative party whip suspended pending an investigation into allegations that he had watched pornography in the Commons chamber during a debate. After admitting to the allegations, he resigned as an MP. His departure triggered a by-election held on 23 June, which was won by the Liberal Democrat candidate, Richard Foord.
Early life and career
Neil Quentin Gordon Parish was born in Bridgwater, Somerset, on 26 May 1956.[1][2][3][4][5] Parish attended Brymore School, a local authority-run agricultural boarding school at Cannington near Bridgwater. In 1972,[5] he left school at 16 to manage the family farm.[3][4]
Parish began his career in politics in local government, serving from 1983 to 1995 as Councillor, Sedgemoor District Council; 1989–95 as Deputy leader, Sedgemoor District Council; 1989–93 as Councillor, Somerset County Council.[5] In the 1997 general election, he contested Torfaen, a safe Labour seat in South Wales. Incumbent MP Paul Murphy defeated him by 24,536 votes.[6]
For his entire career in the European Parliament, he was a member of the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development. From January 2007 to July 2009 he was chairman of that committee. In December 2001, he was appointed Conservative spokesman on agriculture and he was also the delegation's deputy chief whip. He was instrumental in setting up the year-long European Parliament's public inquiry into the 2007 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak, and he was also a member of the European Parliament's inquiry into the collapse of Equitable Life. He also served as a substitute member of the Committee on Fisheries.
Parish was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Tiverton and Honiton on 6 May 2010. The Conservative vote increased by 3.6 per cent, with Parish attracting 27,614 votes – 50.3 per cent of the overall votes cast. He had a majority of 9,320 votes.[13]
Parish was elected by Conservative backbenchers as chairman of the 1922 Committee environment policy committee in July 2010. The committee plays a role in policy formation and as a channel of communication between backbenchers and ministers.[15] From 2010 to 2015, Parish was chairman of the Associate Parliamentary Group for Animal Welfare.[16] Parish was one of 79 Conservative MPs who, on 24 October 2011, rebelled against a three-line whip by voting for a referendum on the UK's relationship with the European Union.[17]
In July 2012, Parish relaunched and was elected the chairman of both the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Beef and Lamb and the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Pig and Poultry, which ensure that parliamentarians are briefed by industry experts on the latest developments in the industry, including supply chains, exports, sustainability, health and nutrition.[18]
On 22 July 2014, Parish was appointed the parliamentary private secretary to John Hayes, Minister of State for Transport, who also acted as a senior advisor to the prime minister.[19]
Parish opposes, and voted against the implementation of same-sex marriage, stating that he felt the issue was "for the Church and Christians to decide [upon], not for parliament to legislate."[20] In 2014, Parish voted against enabling the courts to deal with proceedings for the divorce of a same-sex couple and against making same-sex marriage available to armed forces personnel outside the UK.[21][22]
After the 2015 general election, he was returned unopposed as the chairman of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee.[23]
In 2016, he received the annual Dairy UK Award together with Heather Wheeler MP for their support of dairy farmers and the industry.[25] While an MP, Parish continued to live on his family farm in Somerset and declared a financial interest in it.[26][27]
Pornography investigation
On 25 April 2022, a group of female Conservative MPs met with the Government Chief WhipChris Heaton-Harris to complain about sexism in parliament. In the course of the discussion one female MP spoke out alleging that an unnamed male colleague had been watching pornography next to her in the House of Commons. Initial media reporting likewise did not name the MP.[28] Before he had been publicly identified as the accused MP, Parish was interviewed on GB News and said that the MP should be "dealt with and dealt with seriously".[29][30]
On 29 April Parish had the Conservative whip withdrawn after being accused of watching pornography on a personal mobile phone in the Commons chamber.[31] Parish referred himself to the Commons Select Committee on Standards following the removal of the whip.[32] The allegation was made by a female Conservative minister, and later corroborated by another unnamed MP.[33]
Initially, Parish said that he might have viewed the pornography by mistake.[34][35] He subsequently told the BBC that he had watched pornography in the Palace of Westminster on two occasions, first accidentally and then deliberately. He said that he had been initially looking at a website about tractors; allies of Parish suggested he may have been looking at Claas Dominator tractors, a brand of combine harvesters.[36][37] According to Parish, he then reached "another website with a very similar name" and "watched for a bit". He said: "My crime – biggest crime – is that on another occasion I went in a second time ... that was [while] sitting waiting to vote."[38][39]
In an interview with LBC in June 2022, Parish said that he had experienced suicidal thoughts after the incident and that the police had "very kindly and rightly" confiscated his guns to prevent him from killing himself. He also said that he had experienced death threats over the incident. Parish additionally commented that he "was wrong to be watching [pornography]" and that what he did was "very immoral" but not illegal. Asked if he had been "done in" by some of his colleagues, he replied: "I think probably I was."[45]
Recent activities
In October 2023 he appeared, alongside HRVY, on Channel 4 in the second episode of the prison documentary Banged Up.[46]
Personal life
In 1981 Parish married Susan Gail,[1] whom he employed as a junior secretary while serving as an MP, later, a teacher.[5][12][47] The couple have a son and a daughter,[5] and two grandchildren.[1][12]
^ ab"Politics in Westcountry 'the preserve of an elite'". Exeter Express and Echo. 2 December 2013. Archived from the original on 4 December 2013. Born Somerset, went to Brymore, a local authority-run agricultural boarding school, left at 16 to manage the family farm in Somerset before becoming an MEP for South West England from 1999 to 2009.