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Home News How ex-Labour minister Andrew Gwynne was best known for being branded a ‘big girl’s blouse’ by Boris in live TV clash – before offensive messages cost him his job

How ex-Labour minister Andrew Gwynne was best known for being branded a ‘big girl’s blouse’ by Boris in live TV clash – before offensive messages cost him his job

by Abella
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Boris Johnson 'A Pillock' calling live television during the 2017 general election campaign was certainly the first most voters who had heard of Andrew Gwynne.

Unfortunately for the Labor Member of Parliament, he may now be better known for the offensive messages that cost him his job yesterday.

However, this is not the first time in his political career almost 30 years that the man -born parliament member has been deposited in controversy.

A year after his notorious on television on television with Mr. Johnson, the Member of Parliament, then a member of the Voorbank of Jeremy Corbyn, was revealed as a member of a controversial Facebook group of employment obligations on which anti-Semitic messages were shared.

Those include: “Jews will pay 7 times more for their sins – Islam will unite the religious world.”

At one point, colleague Labor MP John Mann, now a pear and the independent government adviser on anti-Semitism, stated that every member of parliament on that Facebook site should 'get out' immediately.

Mr. Gwynne hit back by insisting that he would not have followed the content without his knowledge, and would remove his name.

Mr. Gwynne, now 50, can trace his labor career in 1996 when he became the youngest councilor in England – he was chosen in the Tamesside Council in Greater Manchester at the age of 21.

How ex-Labour minister Andrew Gwynne was best known for being branded a ‘big girl’s blouse’ by Boris in live TV clash – before offensive messages cost him his job

The Labor MP is perhaps better known for the offensive messages that cost him his work yesterday

Jeremy Corbyn (center) runs with shadow company secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey and Shadow Communities Secretary Andrew Gwynne (depicted in 2019)

Jeremy Corbyn (center) runs with shadow company secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey and Shadow Communities Secretary Andrew Gwynne (depicted in 2019)

It was Labor's campaign president that he crashed the famous gate, Mr. Johnson's Sky News interview, and claimed that the Tory Big Beast had refused a frontal confrontation

It was Labor's campaign president that he crashed the famous gate, Mr. Johnson's Sky News interview, and claimed that the Tory Big Beast had refused a frontal confrontation

Keir Starmer at a cabinet meeting of Labor Party in Salford with Mr. Gwynne in 2019

Keir Starmer at a cabinet meeting of Labor Party in Salford with Mr. Gwynne in 2019

Nine years later he graduated from the Commons as MP for Denton and Reddish in Greater Manchester – an area that he still represents today changes the border aside.

A front bencher for the most of his commons career, it was as a campaign president of Labor that he torn the famous gate interview with Mr. Johnson's Sky News and claimed that Tory Big Beast had refused a frontal confrontation.

After Mr. Johnson – who was at the time Minister of Foreign Affairs – called him a “big girl's blouse” and seemed to give him a push, Mr. Gwynne hit back by saying, “Don't be Pillock.”

Despite his tough achievement at the time, the father of three-die walked Long Covid during the pandemic fight against depression.

In 2021, Mr Gwynne spoke with GB News about how his mother's death from cancer in 1994 was his lowest point 'because you do not get over it'.

Only last week in the commons, talking about the national cancer plan of the government, did he make it clear to the members of parliament that had kept the disease on his family.

As Minister of Health, he said: 'After I have lost both my parents to cancer, I am so grateful to the prime minister for giving this job. He gave me the chance of life to make my parents proud by creating the kind of compassionate and human health care that earns all our voters. '

The fact that he – until yesterday – had an important job in the government of Sir Keir Starmer with his old allies in the Corbyn Wing of Labor. As someone was yesterday: “Andrew moved from Corbyn to Starmer without breaking a sweat.”

Other colleagues described Mr. Gywnne as a shy man in a public role.

One said last night: 'Some of us never knew for sure that Andrew was suitable for the pressure of the ministerial office. Unfortunately, the revelation of these reports confirmed that that was true. '

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