Our families fear for our personal safety, say MPs

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Floral tributes to Sir David AmessImage source, European Pressphoto Agency

More MPs have opened up about their own personal safety following the death of their colleague, Sir David Amess, who was stabbed multiple times during a meeting with his constituents in Essex on Friday.

Many have spoken of a toxic and increasingly polarised political culture where online trolling has become widespread, ranging from personal insults at one end of the spectrum to direct threats of violence and even death at the other.

Labour MP, Tulip Siddiq, told BBC Breakfast all MPs, especially women, are subject to attack and that her mother feared for her doing the job.

Several too have spoken of concerns about the safety of their staff and their families amid calls for security measures to be stepped up, particularly while MPs are in their constituencies meeting voters.

'Huge impact on our families'

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Labour MP Tulip Siddiq has told the BBC her mother feared for her safety.

Ms Siddiq said the threats and abuse she gets "range from very trivial things" such as commenting on her appearance, her height and her name to "more sinister" threats such as advocating violence against her or her family.

She said being an MP had had a "constant effect" on her family for years, especially her parents.

She recalled the murder of the former Labour MP, Jo Cox, in 2016 and said her own mother called her immediately on hearing an MP had been attacked "because her first thought was it must have been me".

She added: "It is just this constant effect on her of hearing there has been abuse directed at us, that we're getting death threats, that all of us MPs are constantly racially abused, whether you're from a Jewish faith or have a Muslim last name.

"Whatever it is, people will pick on you.

"These keyboard warriors, at some point you do think I just need to ignore them and get on with my job.

"You do start to develop very thick skin but maybe that's the wrong way to go about it."

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

James Duddridge attending the vigil for Sir David Amess - their constituencies neighbour each other.

Sir David's neighbouring MP in Southend, Conservative James Duddridge, told Radio 4's Today programme about the fears his family and friends live with.

"No-one that loves me, none of my friends would want me to be a Member of Parliament.

"The only reason they support it is because they know that that's what I believe is an honourable thing to do, a worthwhile thing to do, something I'd always wanted to do, something that I have enjoyed. "

'Terrible ratcheting up of nastiness'

Labour MP, Chris Bryant said he received a death threat this weekend after calling for people to be kinder following Sir David's death.

He said Parliament has been "turned into a bit of a fortress" in recent years, but he believed MPs are most vulnerable in their constituencies when they hold surgeries and meeting voters.

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Labour MP Chris Bryant says he has been subject to numerous threats in recent years

He said one of the best things about the British political system is that MPs are "very accessible" but "over the last few years, there has been a terrible ratcheting up of nastiness".

Mr Bryant said he questions "all the time" why he does the job but his concerns are "not just about me".

"It's about my staff and it's about my family as well."

He said he went in to politics because he cares about poverty, climate change, human rights and the growing use of food banks.

"I'm passionate about wanting to change the world and no-one is going to stop me," he added.

Death threats

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab said: "Although it is shocking and it is heart-wrenching, this is not entirely out of the blue" because "everyone has had this experience of intensifying abuse and that tipping in to threats".

He said he has had "three threats to life or limb that have required an intervention in the last two years".

Mr Raab said that while every step must be taken to make sure MPs, especially female politicians, can do their jobs, "we don't want the terrorists to win, we do not want this wedge placed between us and our communities".

And he said he will continue to have face-to-face surgeries rather than moving all his meetings online.

Downing Street has said that it will be "down to individual MPs and the police" whether MPs should continue to meet constituents face to face.

The prime minister's official spokesman said MPs may "rightly" be concerned about their security following the killing of Sir David.

The spokesman said MPs "have been contacted by the police to discuss their activities and events so their arrangements can be reviewed."

Labour's Jess Phillips said while security advice is welcome, she individually has to "make the decision about how close I am to my constituents".

"Often the best security advice in the world is quite hard to follow when you're in your home town, not just because I want to be a good representative but because I live there", she said.

She added that MPs need to "demystify what politics is" because "people don't consider people like me to be frontline workers but that's exactly what we are".

Shadow Home Secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds told BBC Breakfast he too had received death threats due to his job.

"I've had incidents since I've become a Member of Parliament, whether it's intimidation while out on the streets, death threats, terrible letters, awful emails.

"I am in no sense alone in that.

"I don't know a Member of Parliament who has not suffered in that way.

"It's clear that something now has to change."

Image source, UK Parliament
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Dame Eleanor Laing says MPs are "vilified" in the media

'Culture of aggression'

Deputy Speaker Dame Eleanor Laing told Radio 4's Today it was a "pity" the media does not say nice things about MPs when they are still doing their jobs.

She said: "It can be deeply upsetting when you know that MPs and ministers are working hard to solve some problem or other and when the matter is discussed in the media, MPs are vilified, ministers are spoken to very harshly and it does help to create a culture of aggression.

"Why can't we just try to have a culture of kindness?" she added.