FLAKING IN THEIR BOOTS

Furious Dominic Raab takes parting shot at snowflake civil servants as he quits over ‘dangerous’ bullying report

A FURIOUS Dominic Raab today blasted snowflake civil servants for leaving his political career in tatters.

The ex-minister spectacularly resigned from Cabinet after a bombshell report upheld two of eight formal bullying complaints against him.

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Dominic Raab, seen leaving his home today, has resigned as Deputy PMCredit: LNP
The long-awaited inquiry into bullying allegations against the Deputy PM was handed to Rishi Sunak yesterdayCredit: PA
In his resignation letter Mr Raab hit out at the probe into allegations of bullying, claiming it sets a 'dangerous' precedent
But he promised to remain loyal to the Prime Minister in the second page of his letter
Responding, Rishi Sunak admitted there were 'shortcomings' to the bullying probe
Despite its supportive tone, there were no hints from the PM at a comeback for Mr Raab any time soon

But in a blistering resignation letter, Mr Raab blasted the inquiry into his behaviour as "dangerous".

And he hit out at woke civil servants who he argued sabotaged his time in office.

Rishi Sunak responded to Mr Raab's letter by conceding he was "right" to resign.

But he admitted there were "shortcomings" in the way the bullying complaints were handled which must be learnt from.

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"Your resignation should not make us forget your record of delivery," the PM said.

This morning Mr Raab hit out at the probe for setting a "low threshold" for bullying, which will lead to other ministers being targeted by disgruntled pen pushers.

"It will encourage spurious claims against ministers," the ex-DPM said.

"And it will have a chilling effect on those driving change on behalf of your government - and ultimately the British people."

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In a mini-reshuffle this afternoon, Mr Raab was replaced as Justice Secretary by Alex Chalk.

Meanwhile, Oliver Dowden was promoted to Deputy PM, in addition to his brief as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.

Mr Sunak announced that ex-minister Chloe Smith will provide maternity cover for Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan.

The appointment will take place once Ms Donelan's leave begins.

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And also making a government comeback will be Sir John Whittingdale, who is set to take over as a tech minister from Julia Lopez when she goes on maternity leave later this year.

An enraged Mr Raab insisted a "number of improprieties" took place throughout the inquiry, which was led by barrister Adam Tolley KC.

He blamed civil servants for the "systematic leaking of skewed and fabricated claims to the media".

And he suggested there was a "coercive removal" of dedicated staff from his private office in October last year.

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The long-awaited Raab Report upheld two formal complaints against the MP for Esher and Walton - one from his time in the Department for Exiting the EU and the other from his stint in the Foreign Office.

Mr Raab slammed the adverse findings as "flawed".

He insisted ministers be able to exercise "direct oversight with respect to senior officials".

And he said they should be allowed to give "direct critical feedback on briefings and submissions to senior officials".

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