In addition to the recall petitions that were initiated, there have been several occasions where an MP was found to have committed serious misconduct or a criminal act, but the recall process was not initiated due to subsequent events • In November 2021,
Owen Paterson (
North Shropshire) had been found by the
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards to have breached lobbying rules, but the House of Commons voted to reject a proposed 30-day suspension in November 2021 after the government whipped its MPs to vote against the committee's report. The Government subsequently made a U-turn and proposed a new vote, but Paterson chose to resign from Parliament, pre-empting the vote and triggering
a by-election. • In October 2022,
Chris Matheson (
City of Chester) was found to have committed sexual misconduct, and the IEP recommended a suspension of 14 days; he resigned from Parliament on the day the report was published, triggering
a by-election without a recall petition. • In June 2023, former Prime Minister
Boris Johnson (
Uxbridge and South Ruislip) was found by the
Committee of Privileges to have deliberately misled Parliament about
parties at 10 Downing Street during COVID-19 lockdowns. Initially, the committee planned to propose a suspension of twenty days (triggering a recall petition), but after Johnson made public statements that impugned the committee after being given its report before publication, he was additionally found to be in
contempt of Parliament. Johnson resigned as MP before the committee reported, requiring
a by-election; the committee said that if he had still been an MP a 90-day suspension would have been recommended. • In September 2023,
Chris Pincher (
Tamworth) resigned his seat after the Standards Committee recommended an 8-week suspension and he lost his appeal over this recommendation. The suspension was proposed after he drunkenly groped two men. • In March 2025, a petition was expected in
Runcorn and Helsby following the sentencing of former Labour MP
Mike Amesbury on 24 February 2025 to 10 weeks on prison, which on appeal was suspended for two years. • In October 2021,
Claudia Webbe (
Leicester East) was convicted of harassment and initially sentenced to ten weeks' imprisonment, suspended. However, on appeal her sentence was reduced to a non-custodial one, so no petition was triggered. == Notes ==