Prime
minister accepts resignation of Mark Harper, who launched government's 'go
home' campaign last year
theguardian.com,
Staff and agencies, Saturday 8 February 2014
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| Immigration minister Mark Harper, who has resigned for employing an illegal immigrant as a cleaner. Photograph: Graeme Robertson |
The immigration
minister, Mark Harper, has resigned for employing an illegal immigrant as a
cleaner, Downing Street said on Saturday.
Number 10
said there was "no suggestion that Mr Harper knowingly employed an illegal
immigrant" but the prime minister, David Cameron, had "accepted his
resignation with regret".
Last year
Harper launched a government advertising campaign that targeted racially mixed
areas with mobile billboards warning illegal immigrants to "go home or
face arrest".
In his
resignation letter Harper said that while he had not broken the law as an
employer, he believed that his position meant he must "hold myself to a
higher standard than expected of others".
He conceded
that he "should have checked more thoroughly" when he took on the
highly sensitive role that the documents provided by the cleaner were genuine.
In 2007
when she was recruited to look after his London flat he was given a copy of her
passport and a Home Office letter stating that she had indefinite leave to
remain in the UK and the right to work and run a business.
Last month
– mindful that he was steering the immigration bill through the Commons and
publicly warning employers of the need to check the status of employees – he
sought fresh evidence.
On Thursday
morning, he said, he was informed after checking with immigration officials
that she was in the country illegally.
"I
immediately notified the home secretary and my permanent secretary. This is now
a matter for immigration enforcement," he wrote.
"Although
I complied with the law at all times, I consider that as immigration minister,
who is taking legislation through parliament which will toughen up our
immigration laws, I should hold myself to a higher standard than expected of
others." The prime minister said Harper had "taken an honourable
decision" and that he hoped to see him return to the frontbench
"before too long".
"I
understand your view that, although you carried out checks on your cleaner, you
feel that you should hold yourself to an especially high standard as
immigration minister," Cameron wrote.
In a
limited reshuffle, junior home office minister James Brokenshire has replaced
Harper as minister of state, while Karen Bradley moves from the whips office to
fill his role.
John Penrose
is promoted within the whips office to replace Bradley and Harriet Baldwin is
brought into the government ranks as a junior whip.
Home
Secretary Theresa May said she was sorry to see Harper go. "Mark has been
an excellent minister and he can be proud of the role he has played in sharply
reducing immigration to Britain."

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