Prominent backbencher Andrew Bridgen is no longer a Conservative MP after he compared the COVID vaccine to the Holocaust.
Mr Bridgen claimed COVID vaccines “are causing serious harms” and said the programme was “the biggest crime against humanity since the holocaust”.
Tory Chief Whip Simon Hart said: “Andrew Bridgen has crossed a line, causing great offence in the process.
“As a nation we should be very proud of what has been achieved through the vaccine programme. The vaccine is the best defence against COVID that we have.
“Misinformation about the vaccine causes harm and costs lives. I am therefore removing the whip from Andrew Bridgen with immediate effect, pending a formal investigation.”
Having the whip removed means Mr Bridgen is no longer a Conservative MP but is now an independent MP.
The MP for North West Leicestershire is already serving a five-day suspension from the Commons for breaching lobbying rules and suggesting the woman investigating him could be swayed with a peerage.
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Mr Bridgen has continually shared anti-vaccine messaging, claiming they are causing harm to people.
In a tweet today he posted a vaccine efficacy chart with the caption: “As one consultant cardiologist said to me, this is the biggest crime against humanity since the Holocaust.”
His comment comes about a fortnight before Holocaust Memorial Day on 27 January.
Reacting to Mr Bridgen having the whip removed, John Mann, the government’s independent anti-Semitism adviser, said: “There is no possibility that Bridgen can be allowed to stand at the next election.
“He cannot claim that he didn’t realise the level of offence that his remarks cause.”
Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said: “This comment is highly irresponsible, wholly inappropriate and an elected politician should know better.”
About 20 million lives were saved by the COVID vaccine in its first year, Imperial College London research published in June last year found.
The Imperial research suggests another 600,000 deaths could have been avoided if a World Health Organisation (WHO) target of vaccinating 40% of the global population by the end of 2021 had been met.