Britain’s aid minister faced the sack yesterday over unauthorised meetings in Israel, as she became the latest Cabinet member caught up in a whirlwind of scandals rocking Prime Minister Theresa May’s government.
May summoned International Development Secretary Priti Patel back from a trip to Africa to explain her talks with Israeli politicians, in which she reportedly raised the possibility of Britain diverting aid to the Israeli army.
Patel had apologised on Monday for holding 12 separate meetings — including with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — during a family holiday to Israel in August, without notifying the Foreign Office or Downing Street in advance.
After a public reprimand from the prime minister, Patel left London on Tuesday on a three-day trip to Uganda, but a government source said she was returning home at May’s request.
If she is sacked, Patel would become the second Cabinet minister in a week to leave May’s government, after Michael Fallon quit as defence secretary on November 1 following allegations of sexual harassment.
Britain is facing its biggest peacetime challenge in Brexit, but May has struggled to keep her ministers in line since losing her parliamentary majority in a snap June election.
Months of public divisions over the negotiations with the EU have in recent days given way to scandals over foreign affairs and sexual abuse.
May’s deputy Damian Green is being investigated for groping a journalist in 2014 — which he denies — while a similar probe is underway into the behaviour of junior trade minister Mark Garnier towards his secretary.
Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has meanwhile been accused of jeopardising the case of a British woman jailed in Iran.
May put off a mooted reshuffle after her election setback, but some MPs have called on her to act to assert her power over a government that looks increasingly adrift.
On Monday, Patel revealed details of her meetings in Israel, which included with NGOs and businesses, and said they were arranged by Lord Stuart Polak, the honorary president of lobbying group Conservative Friends of Israel.
But it emerged late Tuesday there had been another two unauthorised meetings in September, with Israel’s Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan in London and senior foreign ministry official Yuval Rotem in New York.
“I don’t understand what more she needs to do to be sacked,” one unnamed minister told the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
During her meetings, Patel discussed the possibility of British aid being used to support medical assistance for Syrian refugees arriving in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, Downing Street said.
Reports suggest however that she did not explain to May that this involved supplying funding to the Israeli army, which has facilitated the treatment of more than 3,100 wounded refugees in Israeli hospitals since 2013.
In a further development yesterday, Israel’s Haaretz newspaper reported that Patel visited a military field hospital in the Golan Heights as a guest of the government.
Patel’s ministry declined to comment on the report.
Patel was a leading campaigner for Britain to leave the European Union in last year’s referendum, and is a prominent figure in May’s Cabinet.