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Anti-vaxxer who accused Matt Hancock of murder found guilty of harassment | Politics News

An anti-vaccine protester who accused former health secretary Matt Hancock of murdering people during the COVID pandemic has been found guilty of harassment.

Geza Tarjanyi, 62, from Leyland in Lancashire, shoulder-barged Mr Hancock and “shouted ridiculous conspiracy theories” on two separate occasions on 19 and 24 January.

Senior district judge Paul Goldspring said Tarjanyi “deliberately intimidated and harassed” the MP.

Following the verdict, Mr Hancock said: “I am relieved at this guilty verdict. This individual didn’t just attack me, but he’s attacked several MPs and other public servants.

“We in the UK pride ourselves as a global symbol of democracy, built around respectful debate to build a more inclusive and harmonious society. Violence against anyone for their political beliefs is unacceptable.

“I would like to thank the CPS, Transport for London and the British Transport Police who have been fantastic throughout.”

Mr Hancock previously told Westminster Magistrates’ Court he feared the man would push him down an escalator during a confrontation over his handling of the pandemic.

Giving evidence, Mr Hancock said: “As a public figure, I can’t recall a time when I felt as intimidated as this.”

During the first incident on 19 January, Mr Hancock was walking past an anti-vaccination protest near parliament with a member of his staff when Tarjanyi filmed him while asking why he had “killed so many people”, before shoulder barging him, the court heard.

The MP for West Suffolk said he felt “physically intimidated” and “needed to get to a place of safety” during the five-minute interaction, describing the defendant as being “completely unreasonable”.

Energy minister says it would be ‘mad’ not to issue oil and gas licences – politics latest

“It made me feel unsafe going about my place of work, it made me frustrated that instead of engaging in a normal debate, someone was trying to intimidate me, I thought that was unacceptable,” he told the court.

“I had a pretty good impression he was taken over by these ridiculous conspiracy theories.”

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Former British Health Secretary Matt Hancock leaves after testifying at the COVID-19 Inquiry, in London, Britain, June 27, 2023 REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
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Matt Hancock said he felt ‘physically intimidated’

During the second incident, the defendant is alleged to have followed Mr Hancock through Westminster underground station around 8am on 24 January, before boarding the same train.

The politician, who had just had breakfast with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, told the court he recognised the defendant and felt “more intimidated” because he was alone.

He asked Transport for London (TfL) staff to intervene – but claimed Tarjanyi began harassing “anyone who came to my aid”.

Read more:
By-election to be held after COVID rule-breaker MP Margaret Ferrier loses seat
COVID-19 inquiry: Brexit preparation ‘helped’ COVID response, Michael Gove argues

Mr Hancock said he stopped at the top of an escalator to “resolve the situation” – but that he was “being pushed from behind”.

“Obviously I was extremely worried at this time,” he told the court.

“If I had lost my balance at this point, I would have tumbled down the escalator.

“I had to work to maintain my balance and stop myself falling down the escalator.”

Mr Hancock resigned as health secretary in June 2021, admitting to breaching his own social-distancing guidelines when leaked CCTV showed him kissing his married lover, aide Gina Coladangelo, in his office.

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June: ‘I’m profoundly sorry for each COVID death’

He later found himself embroiled in further scandal when he jetted to the Australian jungle for a controversial appearance on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! – which led to the whip being suspended.

Mr Hancock later confirmed in December that he would not stand at the next general election.

Matt Hancock to appear before COVID inquiry | Politics News

Former Health Secretary Matt Hancock will be questioned by the COVID inquiry today on the UK’s resilience to and preparedness for the pandemic.

Mr Hancock is the first politician directly involved in the government’s response to the coronavirus to face the inquiry, followed by former First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon who will appear on Thursday.

So far, former prime minister and former chancellor David Cameron and George Osborne have defended spending cuts during their time in office, claiming austerity had little effect on the NHS’s ability to react to the pandemic.

However, as a cabinet minister during the pandemic, Matt Hancock’s appearance is likely to enrage organisations like the COVID -19 Bereaved Families for Justice group and others who have been heavily critical of his record in government.

For now, the independent MP will only be questioned regarding the UK’s resilience and preparedness ahead of the spread of the coronavirus.

But this is likely to be the first of several appearances in front of the inquiry as Boris Johnson’s former government remains under heavy scrutiny.

Read more:
Austerity measures hit public health services, inquiry told
What we learned from the first week of the COVID inquiry
High levels of obesity and diabetes worsened pandemic in UK

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Shout of “shame on you” heard as Jeremy Hunt arrives at COVID inquiry

Moreover, the former Health Secretary’s appearance will be a gift to Labour, reminding the public once again of the slew of political scandals under the Tories, most notably Hancock standing down after breaching COVID rules by kissing his then colleague and now partner Gina Coladangelo.

Hancock took mistress to private dinners with US health sec – then tried to remove suggestion he invited her, leaked messages show | Politics News

Matt Hancock took his mistress to private dinners with the US health secretary then altered a ministerial response to remove suggestions he invited her, leaked messages have revealed.

The latest revelation from more than 100,000 WhatsApp messages leaked to the Telegraph shows a conversation between Mr Hancock’s former political adviser, Allan Nixon, and the former health secretary.

Gina Coladangelo, who Mr Hancock was having an affair with, attended two dinners with him at a G7 summit of health ministers held in Oxford about a month after their relationship started.

She was appointed a non-executive director of the Department of Health and Social care (DHSC) in September 2020, eight months before the pair started seeing each other in early May 2021.

Journalist Isabel Oakeshott said she leaked the messages in the interests of “public interest” after Mr Hancock handed them to her as she helped him write his Pandemic Diaries book.

The latest messages, revealed on Sunday, show Ms Coladangelo was invited to the dinners as Mr Hancock’s guest with Xavier Becerra, US health secretary, on 3 and 4 June at Mansfield College, Oxford University.

After Mr Hancock was forced to resign over the affair in late June 2021 when CCTV footage was published of them kissing in his office, Labour MP Ben Bradshaw asked what role Ms Coladangelo played at the G7 meeting and what expenses she claimed.

Allan Nixon, Mr Hancock’s former political adviser who had stayed on at DHSC to help Sajid Javid take over, had a WhatsApp conversation with Mr Hancock suggesting how he should answer the question.

Read more: How have Hancock’s WhatsApps been leaked – and what is an NDA?

In the first exchange, Mr Nixon appeared to have scribbled out a printed answer and suggested another in biro.

The original suggested reply said: “Gina Coladangelo attended the G7 Health Ministers’ Meeting at the request of the previous Secretary of State, for the Department of Health and Social Care.”

But Mr Nixon wrote this should be changed to: “Gina Coladangelo played an advisory role to the Secretary of State at the G7 meeting.”

Mr Hancock then suggested a further version that erased any link to him: “Gina Coladangelo attended the G7 in her role as a non-executive director of DHSC.”

The final response, published on 28 October 2021, removed any reference to Mr Hancock or the DHSC by name.

“Gina Coladangelo attended the G7 health ministers’ meeting as a part of the UK delegation,” it read.

Read more:
Hancock told aides he wanted to ‘frighten the pants off everyone’ on COVID

Leaked messages show Hancock’s reaction to filmed ‘snog’ with aide

In response to the question about expenses, Mr Hancock had wanted it to say “zero” but Mr Nixon said this was overruled by Sir Chris Wormald, DHSC’s permanent secretary.

Mr Hancock said it was true she incurred no expenses and warned: “This will be another s*** show if it goes wrong.”

The final answer read: “All travel and subsistence costs were covered as part of the Department’s overall booking. Ms Coladangelo did not claim any additional expenses.”

Sky News understands Matt Hancock believes it is normal for parliamentary questions to be amended, with ministers doing so frequently.

Sources close to him said it is outrageous to suggest he did anything wrong and the response was reasonable and accurate.

Matt Hancock and his girlfriend Gina Coladangelo
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Mr Hancock was met by his girlfriend in the jungle after appearing on I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!

Also released on Sunday were WhatsApp messages from head of the civil service Simon Case, who was the cabinet secretary under Mr Johnson.

He said to Mr Hancock the public needed to be told to isolate by “trusted local figures, not nationally distrusted figures like the PM” in October 2020, as the government was expanding testing, the Telegraph reported.

Earlier this week, the Telegraph released messages showing Mr Hancock and others discussing how to use the Kent COVID variant to scare the public so they would obey the rules in December 2020.

Mr Hancock told aides he wanted to “frighten the pants off everyone” to ensure restriction compliance.

Another set of messages was revealed this week showing Mr Hancock’s former aide called Boris Johnson’s senior adviser Dominic Cummings a “f***ing piece of s***”.

Jamie Njoku-Goodwin made the remark in March 2021 after Mr Cummings described the DHSC as having been reduced to a “smoking ruin” by the pandemic during a parliamentary committee hearing.

He also called him a “psychotherapist” before quickly correcting the typo to: “Psychopath.”

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Matt Hancock responds to leak of lockdown WhatsApp messages | Politics News

Matt Hancock has denounced what he said was a “massive betrayal and breach of trust” following the leaking of lockdown Whatsapp messages.

The exchanges were published in The Daily Telegraph after he shared them with journalist Isabel Oakeshott, who worked with the former health secretary on his Pandemic Diaries book.

In a lengthy statement, Mr Hancock denied sending a “menacing message” to Ms Oakeshott – a claim she made last night as she defended breaking a Non Disclosure Agreement (NDA) to leak the messages.

The MP said: “I am hugely disappointed and sad at the massive betrayal and breach of trust by Isabel Oakeshott. I am also sorry for the impact on the very many people – political colleagues, civil servants and friends – who worked hard with me to get through the pandemic and save lives.

“There is absolutely no public interest case for this huge breach. All the materials for the book have already been made available to the Inquiry, which is the right, and only, place for everything to be considered properly and the right lessons to be learned. As we have seen, releasing them in this way gives a partial, biased account to suit an anti-lockdown agenda.”

Last night, Ms Oakeshott insisted she gave messages to the Telegraph because of the “overwhelming” public interest and it was not about attacking the former health secretary.

She also claimed she received a “menacing message” from Mr Hancock when he found out about what she had done – but Mr Hancock said “this is wrong”.

He said: “Last night, I was accused of sending menacing messages to Isabel. This is also wrong. When I heard confused rumours of a publication late on Tuesday night, I called and messaged Isabel to ask her if she had ‘any clues’ about it, and got no response. When I then saw what she’d done, I messaged to say it was ‘a big mistake’. Nothing more.”

He said he would not be commenting further on any stories “or false allegations that Isabel will make”.

“I will respond to the substance in the appropriate place, at the inquiry, so that we can properly learn all the lessons based on a full and objective understanding of what happened in the pandemic, and why,” he said.

The first story from the tranche of messages broke last night in the Telegraph, alleging the former health secretary had rejected testing advice on care homes and expressed concern it could get in the way of meeting his targets.

The MP strongly denied the “distorted account”, with a spokesman alleging the conversations had been “spun to fit an anti-lockdown agenda”.

Speaking to TalkTV in her first interview since the article was published, Ms Oakeshott – who received the messages from Mr Hancock while working on his memoir with him – said she had signed an NDA and chose to break it “in the public interest” as it could be “a decade” before the official inquiry into COVID reports back.

She said: “The public interest is overwhelming. Whenever you break a big story which is in the national interest… it can be a rocky road, it can be a bumpy ride.

“I know I am going to get a few knocks over this [but] I am prepared to do this because I think the national interest is so utterly compelling.”

The journalist added: “This for me is not a personal thing about Matt Hancock.”

Matt Hancock sets up TV company following I’m A Celeb appearance | UK News

Matt Hancock has set up his own TV company following his appearances on two reality TV shows.

The former health secretary, who lost the Tory whip over his appearance on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!, has already said he will stand down at the next general election.

The creation of television programming and broadcasting company Greenhazel, first reported by the Sunday People, suggests Mr Hancock hopes for more TV opportunities.

Mr Hancock is listed as the sole director of the firm which was registered with Companies House in January at an address in Newmarket, Suffolk.

The West Suffolk MP’s stint in the Australian jungle earned him £320,000 last year, of which £10,000 was donated to charity.

He also earned £45,000 for taking part in Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins on Channel 4.

Mr Hancock was health secretary for nearly three years but resigned in June 2021 after it emerged he had broken his own COVID guidance by kissing and embracing aide Gina Coladangelo in his office.

Ms Coladangelo greeted Mr Hancock when he left the jungle in third place and was by his side in the audience of ITV skating show Dancing On Ice earlier this month.

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The MP for West Suffolk has held his seat since 2010

Read more:
Man arrested on suspicion of assaulting ex-health secretary
Hancock’s local members asked chief whip not to reinstate him

Mr Hancock’s appearance on I’m a Celeb was criticised by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and other top Tories, as well as mocked by some fellow MPs.

More than 1,000 complaints were made to broadcasting watchdog Ofcom over his participation.

Mr Hancock said he made donations to St Nicholas Hospice in Suffolk and the British Dyslexia Association from his fee, adding that the £10,000 he gave away was more than his monthly salary as an MP which is around £7,000 per month.

Records on the MPs’ register of interests also showed he had been paid £48,000 for an interview and the serialisation of his book, Pandemic Diaries, in the Daily Mail and Mail On Sunday newspapers.

Mr Hancock is due to give evidence to an inquiry into the government’s handling of the pandemic in the summer.

Matt Hancock says ministers were told COVID could kill 820,000 people in UK | UK News

Matt Hancock has said he was warned the COVID pandemic could kill hundreds of thousands of people in the UK two months before the country was put into lockdown and claims ministers “did not really believe it”.

The former health secretary said the chief medical officer for England, Professor Sir Chris Whitty, informed him in January 2020 that, in a “reasonable worst case scenario”, as many as 820,000 could die.

Mr Hancock said when he passed on the warning to other ministers at a cabinet meeting three days later, the reaction was “shrug shrug” as they did not really believe it.

The details are revealed in Mr Hancock’s Pandemic Diaries: The Inside Story Of Britain’s Battle Against Covid, serialised in the Daily Mail and The Mail+.

He said that on 17 January, Sir Whitty warned that there was a “50:50” chance that the virus would reach Britain and laid out the figures.

“The whole room froze. We are looking at a human catastrophe on a scale not seen here for a century.”

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How long COVID ruined my life

However, when he shared the warning with a Brexit Day meeting of the Cabinet on 31 January, he said it was met largely with indifference.

“The reaction was somewhat ‘shrug shrug’ – essentially because they didn’t really believe it. I am constantly feeling that others, who aren’t focused on this every day, are weeks behind what’s going on,” he said.

British Health Secretary Matt Hancock looks on as Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks at a cabinet meeting at the Foreign Office in London, Britain September 15, 2020. Jonathan Buckmaster/Pool via REUTERS
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Matt Hancock and Boris Johnson at a Cabinet meeting in September 2020

Johnson: ‘It will probably go away’

Mr Hancock also suggested that Boris Johnson had been reluctant to engage on the issue.

When he first raised the outbreak in China with him in early January, his response had been: “You keep an eye on it. It will probably go away.”

Read more:
Are care homes now safer?
COVID cases in UK top one million again

A month later he said he warned Mr Johnson that while it might still be possible to contain the virus, it was “more likely we’re going down”. The reply, he said, was simply: “Bash on.”

Nicky Clough visits her mother Pam Harrison in her bedroom at Alexander House Care Home for the first time since the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown restrictions begin to ease, in London, Britain March 8, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah Mckay

More than 200,000 people with COVID have died in the UK, figures show.

The details were released as Mr Hancock returned to Westminster for the first time after his controversial appearance on I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out Of Here!

Hancock defends release of care home residents

Mr Hancock also defended his handling of the controversial decision to release care home residents from hospital without testing, which was blamed for thousands of deaths.

On 2 April, he noted: “The tragic but honest truth is we don’t have enough testing capacity to check anyway. It’s an utter nightmare, but it’s the reality.”

In April, the High Court ruled the government acted unlawfully by discharging untested hospital patients into care homes during the early stages of the pandemic.

The first national lockdown began on 23 March 2020.

Matt Hancock defies expectations by surviving another I’m A Celebrity public vote | Ents & Arts News

Matt Hancock has made it to the final four I’m A Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here! contestants, after comedian Seann Walsh became the seventh person to be eliminated from the reality TV show.

The former health secretary, Mike Tindall, Jill Scott and Owen Warner are now left in the running to be crowned king or queen of the jungle.

The MP for West Suffolk has faced criticism from opposition politicians, from within his own party, and other I’m A Celeb contestants for joining the show at a time when parliament is sitting – but Walsh has voiced his support for the former cabinet minister.

Speaking to Ant and Dec, hosts of the ITV show, after his exit, Walsh described Hancock, 44, as a “lovely guy” and said “he’s still in there for a reason”.

“No one was expecting Matt Hancock to be there,” he added.

Walsh and Hancock entered the Australian jungle together as they joined as undercover moles after the other celebrities had arrived.

They then had to undertake a series of missions in secret before revealing they were the moles to the other campmates, earning them treats.

Seann Walsh in I&#39;m A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!
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Seann Walsh has been booted out. Pic: ITV

“We all listened to each other in there,” Walsh said on Friday evening.

“I don’t know if that is common in the jungle… and everyone kind of got their story out and there was so much support and I feel like everyone in there, not just for me, but I think we all accepted one another for who we are today.”

Read more:
Hancock ‘better at Bushtucker trials than clinical trials’

What Matt Hancock’s constituents have said
‘I find Hancock slimy and slippery’

Walsh revealed he wanted former England player Scott to win the whole show.

Earlier on Friday following DJ Chris Moyles’ elimination, Hancock told the Bush Telegraph: “We’re so near the end and I’m delighted to be still here.

“I never thought I’d make it to the final five and here I am, so I’m very grateful.”

Matt Hancock ‘better at Bushtucker trials than clinical trials’, Andy Burnham says | Politics News

Matt Hancock is “better at bushtucker trials, than clinical trials”, Greater Manchester’s mayor has said.

Andy Burnham said he did not think Hancock was a “bad person” but that his decision to appear on I’m A Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here! demonstrated “bad judgement”.

Speaking on BBC’s Question Time about Hancock’s time in the jungle, Burnham said: “He’s clearly better at showbiz than he is at politics…better at Bushtucker trials than clinical trials, for sure.”

He continued: “He’s not, in my view, a bad person, but it is a bad judgement because politicians should be about we – what’s good for us.

Read more:
What Matt Hancock’s constituents have said
‘I find Hancock slimy and slippery’

“But this is all about me, isn’t it, me, me and my situation and a cost-of-living crisis for his constituents.

“(There) are things that he should be here answering for, not in the jungle trying to curry favour with other celebrities and the British public.”

Hancock held the post of health secretary during the majority of the coronavirus crisis, during which time the vaccine was developed and tested.

On Thursday the West Suffolk MP avoided elimination for the sixth time, after radio DJ Chris Moyles was voted off the show.

Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham before the UEFA Women&#39;s Euro 2022 Group A match at Old Trafford, Manchester. Picture date: Wednesday July 6, 2022
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Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham (file pic)

Moyles, 48, told hosts Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly he was “gutted” that Hancock was more popular than him after making his exit from the show.

After his exit, he told McPartlin and Donnelly: “I’m gutted that Matt Hancock is more popular than me, what the bejesus is going on?”

Moyles admitted it was difficult for him living alongside the former health secretary in camp, saying: “I really struggled with it, to be fair.

“And then what I did was, because I slagged him a bit, I separated Matt Hancock with Matt because we were living with this guy, and he was doing his best to win us stars for food and everything and chipping in so I had to separate the two.

“Matt Hancock I’ve got major issues with but Matt – less issues.”

Boy George tells Matt Hancock he has been ‘hating on him’ in I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! | Ents & Arts News

Boy George has said he finds Matt Hancock “slimy” and told the former health secretary that he has been “hating on” him during their time in I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!.

The 61-year-old Culture Club singer told fellow contestant and comedian Seann Walsh that he thought Mr Hancock was “slippery”, before apologising to the MP.

He said: “(I) can’t stand Matt. I have tried to like him and I’ve failed. I find him slimy, I find him slippery.”

Boy George then told the Bush Telegraph: “He’s probably going to be quite upset and I was kicking off a bit and I just thought, ‘you know what, just tell him to his face what you feel’.”

The singer then said to Mr Hancock that he has been “hating on him”.

“I have to be honest. I sometimes feel like you don’t say what you mean and you’re not particularly direct,” he added.

Boy George apologised to the MP for his behaviour towards him and said he found it difficult to “separate” the politician from the person.

He said he is “struggling” with the former health secretary, but added: “That’s not your problem, that’s my problem. I apologise because I was really slagging you off a minute ago.”

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Boy George not happy with Matt Hancock

Mr Hancock said he would prefer the truth and has “enjoyed spending time with” the singer.

Earlier in the show, the singer revealed his mother was in hospital during the pandemic and he wasn’t able to visit her and said that if she had not survived he would have quit the show when Mr Hancock entered the jungle.

Read more:
Matt Hancock gets stung by a scorpion
‘Sorry doesn’t cut it’: Campmates tell Matt Hancock

Mr Hancock has received a mixed reception from fellow contestants in the camp throughout the show.

Some contestants have grilled him for his rule-breaking actions during the pandemic which saw him resign as health secretary after pictures emerged of him having an affair with his former aide, breaking guidance about mixing with other households.

Charlene White. Pic: ITV
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Charlene White. Pic: ITV

Also in the latest episode, Charlene White became the first contestant to leave this year’s show after a vote by the public.

The 42-year-old Loose Women star was announced as the celebrity with the fewest votes and said she would like Coronation Street star Sue Cleaver or former rugby player Mike Tindall to win the ITV reality show.

Matt Hancock tells I’m A Celebrity campmates winning campsite leader vote ‘more than makes up for’ losing to Boris | Ents & Arts News

Matt Hancock has said being voted leader of the I’m A Celebrity campsite “more than makes up for” losing to Boris Johnson in the 2019 Tory Party leadership election.

The 44-year-old MP was among those who threw their hat into the ring to replace Theresa May in Number 10, but withdrew part way through the contest before putting his support behind Mr Johnson.

Sunday’s episode of I’m A Celebrity saw him receive enough votes from the public to enter a head-to-head with former England rugby star Mike Tindall for control of the campsite.

The former health secretary recruited ITV broadcaster Charlene White, who he has previously clashed with over his breaking of COVID-19 guidance during the pandemic, and they were triumphant in a challenge that saw them working together to switch on a series of lights.

Ahead of the task, Tindall joked: “If I went home, and I’d lost to Matt Hancock, I’d be in so much s**t.”

Hancock then told White: “We are definitely the underdogs”, before she replied: “Did you go into the leadership challenge thinking you were the underdog?”

Dictatorship?

After their win, Hancock declared: “Obviously, it’s a great honour and privilege to be camp leader. I want to thank everybody who voted for me.”

White asked: “Does this win feel sweet, especially after you lost to Boris? Do you feel like you have been vindicated?”, to which he replied: “This more than makes up for it.”

However, their success prompted soap star Sue Cleaver, Tindall’s would-be deputy, to remark: “We now have a dictatorship…”

Hancock and White were then charged with assigning their campmates to chores while remaining exempt and getting the chance to sleep inside the RV – a step up from the campsite.

&#39;I&#39;m a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!&#39; TV Show, Series 22, Australia - 13 Nov 2022
Matt Scorpion - Matt Hancock

13 Nov 2022
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Hancock was stung by a scorpion on Sunday, but luckily it wasn’t deadly

Earlier in the episode, Hancock was stung by a scorpion which “unexpectedly” nipped him on the finger. He later told his fellow contestants: “It was so painful… It hurts a lot, and I’m feeling slightly dizzy.”

He was seen by a medic straight away, with TV presenter and property expert Scarlette Douglas later joking in the Bush Telegraph: “He looked like he wanted to cry.”

Read more:
‘Quite a lot’ of MPs and peers have downloaded I’m A Celeb app to vote for Matt Hancock to do bushtucker trials

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‘I’m looking for a little bit of forgiveness,’ says Hancock

Snakes and offal

Hancock was voted to become leader of the campsite after facing his fifth consecutive trial, House of Horrors, in which he had to crawl through a giant doll’s house full of pigeons, snakes and troughs full of offal, searching for stars to feed the camp.

Asked by co-host Declan Donnelly why he thought the public kept voting for him to take part in the gruelling trials, Hancock responded: “It must be the facial expressions.”

Facing his fear of snakes, the Tory MP located nine out of the 11 stars on offer, despite a snake attempting to strike him at eye level.

After returning triumphant to camp, he admitted: “I was absolutely shi**ing myself.”

The episode also saw former England footballer Jill Scott recalling playing football aged five and how her grandmother had predicted her success.

Attwood’s blood test

Olivia Attwood. Pic: ITV
Image:
Olivia Attwood. Pic: ITV

It comes after former Love Island contestant Olivia Attwood revealed she was forced to withdraw from the show after a routine blood test showed she was anaemic.

The test, which all the contestants undergo randomly throughout the show, also suggested low sodium and potassium levels, prompting staff to immediately take her to hospital.

Attwood, 31, disclosed the reason for her departure after only 24 hours in the Australian jungle in an interview with the Mail On Sunday.

However, she also said her tests at the hospital and back in the UK produced normal results.

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Hancock drenched in slime

A show spokesman said: “As a precautionary measure, Olivia needed to leave the jungle to undergo some medical checks.

“Unfortunately, the medical team has advised it is not safe for Olivia to return to camp as there needs to be further investigation.

“She has been absolutely brilliant, and she’ll be very much missed on the show.”