Rishi Sunak has defended Dominic Raab after the Deputy Prime Minister was accused of bullying behaviour towards civil servants in the Ministry of Justice.
The Prime Minister said he did not "recognise that characterisation" of the Justice Secretary and denied knowing about any formal complaints against him.
Sunak is facing further questions over his judgment as allegations of bullying emerged from Raab's previous stint as Justice Secretary - with staff reportedly offered a "route out" of his department when he was reinstated in October.
The Prime Minister told reporters travelling with him to Indonesia for the G20 summit: "I don't recognise that characterisation of Dominic and I'm not aware of any formal complaints about him. Of course there are established procedures for civil servants if they want to bring to light any issues.
"I'm not aware of any formal complaint about Dominic."
A survey of 20 people working in Raab's private office when he was foreign secretary in 2019 showed that 40 per cent reported personal experience of bullying and harassment - though not necessarily by Raab - and 75 per cent witnessed it, ITV reported on Sunday.
Asked about the leaked results, Sunak said: "My understanding is that these surveys are annual and relate to the overall work environment, not to individuals."
The Liberal Democrats have now written to Cabinet Secretary Simon Case to ask for a list to be published of ministers with "credible allegations of bullying" made against them.
The Guardian previously reported that multiple sources alleged the Cabinet minister created a "culture of fear" in the Ministry of Justice. While our sister paper the Mirror reported Raab had acquired the nickname "The Incinerator" because he "burns through" staff.
The Sun, meanwhile, suggested Raab had once hurled tomatoes from a salad across a room in a fit of anger, a claim a spokesman for the Cabinet minister said was "nonsense".
The allegations will prove troublesome for Sunak, whose choice of Cabinet colleagues has already been called into question.
Labour has described the accusations as "deeply troubling" and claimed they raise "yet more questions" about Mr Sunak’s judgment.
The party’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner, said the prime minister must “come clean” on whether he knew about the allegations when he reappointed Mr Raab to the MoJ, and called for the claims to be investigated “urgently and independently”.
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