2017 incident On 5 November 2017, Pincher resigned as
Comptroller of the Household (Assistant Whip) and voluntarily referred himself to the Conservative Party's complaints procedure and the police, as part of the
2017 Westminster sexual misconduct allegations. He was accused of
sexual assault by former Olympic
rower and Conservative candidate
Alex Story. In 2017, Story alleged that he had been the subject of
unwanted sexual advances from Pincher in 2001, when Pincher invited Story to his flat, where Pincher massaged his neck and talked about his "future in the Conservative Party", before changing into a bathrobe. Recounting the episode, Story said that Pincher's advances had made him seem like a "pound shop
Harvey Weinstein". Pincher said that "I do not recognise either the events or the interpretation placed on them" and that "if Mr Story has ever felt offended by anything I said then I can only apologise to him".
June 2022 incident Pincher resigned as a Government Deputy Chief Whip on 30 June 2022, saying he had "drunk far too much" the night before at the
Carlton Club, a private members' club, in
St James's, London, and having "embarrassed myself and other people". It was alleged that he sexually assaulted two men.
Labour's deputy leader
Angela Rayner said that "the latest episode" showed that standards in public life had dropped under
Boris Johnson. Rayner maintained Johnson should explain why Pincher was made a parliamentary whip and how he could stay a Conservative MP. There were calls, from unnamed Conservative MPs, for a
by-election to be held in Pincher's seat, as the events were considered "much worse" than when the former Conservative MP
Neil Parish was caught watching pornography in the House of Commons earlier in the year. Labour
Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the full truth was needed about events and allegations, asking for the whip to be withdrawn from Pincher as a start, and saying that standards in public life were involved.
Liberal Democrat Wendy Chamberlain said the allegations were so serious it was hard to see how Pincher could stay an MP. She called for a thorough investigation and for Pincher to lose the Conservative whip. He was suspended as a Conservative MP, but it was reported that he would retain his seat in
parliament as an 'independent' member of it. Rayner said Johnson had been "dragged kicking and screaming into taking any action at all."
Shadow Minister of State at the Cabinet Office Baroness Chapman of Darlington said what Johnson knew when he appointed Pincher, who is a party ally, as whip is unclear. "We want to know who knew what and when and why those decisions were made the way they were. I don’t think anybody in Westminster believes that Boris Johnson did not know about the allegations about Mr Pincher."
BBC News reported that "Two police forces investigated allegations of sexual assault by a man believed to be the MP Christopher Pincher."
Further allegations in July 2022 On 3 July 2022, six new allegations against Pincher emerged, involving behaviour over a decade. Three complaints were that Pincher made unwanted advances against other MPs, one in a bar at the House of Commons and one in Pincher's parliamentary office. One complainant reportedly gave Downing Street details in February and expressed concerns over Pincher becoming a whip in charge of other MPs' welfare. Pincher maintained he had no intention of resigning as an MP. Johnson allegedly referred to Pincher as "handsy" and
Dominic Cummings said Johnson joked about him being "Pincher by name, pincher by nature" in 2020. Ministers initially said that Johnson was unaware of any specific complaints against Pincher when he was appointed as deputy chief whip. Later, Downing Street said Johnson was aware at the time of media reports and allegations that were "either resolved or did not progress to a formal complaint". The BBC subsequently reported that an official complaint and subsequent investigation into Pincher, while he was at the Foreign Office (July 2019 to February 2020), had confirmed his misconduct, and that Johnson had been made aware of the matter at that time. Sir
Simon McDonald, former
Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, later said that the prime minister had been briefed "in person" about Pincher in a letter described in a
Guardian editorial as an "extraordinary, devastating intervention", saying about the denial by
10 Downing Street: "This is not true." McDonald said that in the summer of 2019, a group of officials had "complained to me about Mr Pincher's behaviour. In substance, the allegations were similar to those made about his behaviour at the Carlton Club." The treatment of alleged victims was also subject to controversy when it emerged that one of Pincher's alleged victims was asked about their
sexuality by the Assistant Government Whip
Sarah Dines. Upon being asked if he was gay, the alleged victim replied "What's that got to do with it? But yes, I am." She responded "Well, that doesn't make it straightforward." Dines was criticised for asking such a question, and for her response. Tamworth Conservative deputy mayor Daniel Cook said Pincher sexually assaulted him in 2005 and 2006, and that he had lodged a complaint with the Conservative Party. ==Subsequent government crisis==