Disgraced former UK health minister seeks redemption in reality TV
jungle
Send a link to a friend
[November 12, 2022]
By Andrew MacAskill
LONDON (Reuters) - The only vote that
Britain's humiliated former health minister is likely to win these days
is being nominated to undertake repellent tasks to win food in a reality
TV programme in the Australian jungle.
Matt Hancock, who resigned from the government after breaking his own
COVID-19 distancing rules when he was caught kissing an aide, is a
contestant on "I'm A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here!" — where
participants are subjected to trials involving spiders and snakes and
eating kangaroo testicles.
Hancock, still a member of parliament, said he was appearing on the
popular show so the public can see "the real me". So far, viewers have
responded by picking him to eat bugs and collect tokens from boxes
guarded by snakes.
The 44-year-old's decision to take part has angered his constituents,
colleagues in parliament, the prime minister, and the families of those
who lost loved ones from COVID-19, who say he should not be on the show
when an inquiry is scrutinising the government's handling of the
pandemic.
He has been suspended from his ruling Conservative parliamentary party
for taking part, meaning he has to sit as an independent lawmaker.
Hancock is not the first party politician to appear on the show, which
attracts more than 10 million viewers. Nadine Dorries was also suspended
when she took part in 2012. Nine years later then prime minister Boris
Johnson made her culture secretary. Winners of the show often go on to
have higher-profile careers in television and the media.
The Northern Ireland minister, Chris Heaton-Harris, said on Thursday
that a large number of politicians in parliament were downloading the
show's app to vote to inflict pain on Hancock.
Some politicians in Westminster say he has made a big miscalculation
believing he could turn around the public's perceptions of him.
"His biggest flaw has always been that he thought he was more popular
than he actually is," said one Conservative member of parliament, who is
tuning in and voting for the first time.
Just three years ago Hancock competed against Johnson to become prime
minister.
'SLAP IN THE FACE'
Immediately after he joined the show this week, the public nominated him
to face the "tentacles of terror" challenge where he had to collect
stars from boxes guarded by the snakes, eels, crocodiles and crabs.
[to top of second column]
|
British Secretary of State for Health,
Matt Hancock speaks at a memorial tree planting ceremony at Oxford
Botanic Gardens, following a G7 health ministers meeting, ahead of
the G7 leaders' summit, at Mansfield College, Oxford University in
Oxford, Britain June 4, 2021. Steve Parsons/PA Wire/Pool via REUTERS
The public on Thursday also voted
for Hancock to take on the first eating challenge of the series on
Friday, where he will be eating at the show's "Cockroach cafe".
The betting odds suggest he is likely to be selected to do the most
trials of any contestant in the programme's 20-year history.
Hancock said he wants his appearance would show a more "human side"
to the public and he would use his time there to promote his
dyslexia campaign.
When asked by campmates about his resignation last year Hancock said
there was "no excuse" for the actions but insisted "I fell in love".
At the time, the British tabloids called him a "love rat" after he
was pictured embracing the woman appointed to a role to scrutinise
his department.
Hancock was at the centre of the government's fight against the
disease and was heavily criticised in the early stages of the
pandemic for struggling to deliver testing and protective equipment
for hospitals treating patients.
Lobby Akinnola, spokesperson for the COVID-19 Bereaved Families for
Justice campaign, said: "My family was ripped apart by Matt
Hancock’s actions, and turning on the TV to see him being paraded
around as a joke is sickening."
One fellow contestant on the show told him his behaviour during the
pandemic was "a slap in the face", although another said he would
have "a very different account of what he did to what we all think
happened and there will be reasons".
Britain has one of the highest coronavirus death tolls in the world,
with more than 177,000 deaths since the pandemic started in 2020.
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; Editing by Alison Williams)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|