Angela Rayner has resigned after a row over underpaying stamp duty on a property. The Deputy Prime Minister, who is also Housing Secretary, has been at the centre of a furore over her new seaside flat in Hove. She has admitted underpaying £40,000 of stamp duty on the apartment bought earlier this year and an inquiry today concluded she broke the ministerial code.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer previously said "of course" he will act on the findings of an ethics investigation conducted by his independent standards adviser into the tax affairs of his deputy. In an interview with the BBC, he said: "There's a clear procedure. I strengthened that procedure. I am expecting a result pretty quickly."
Sir Keir said: "I do want it to be comprehensive... and then of course I will act on whatever the report is that's put in front of me."
Ms Rayner will continue as MP for Ashton-under-Lyne but has resigned from her government job.
Ms Rayner has been under mounting pressure in recent weeks after reports emerged she had saved £40,000 in stamp duty on a property purchase in Hove by not paying the higher rate reserved for additional home purchases.
She referred herself to independent adviser Sir Laurie Magnus and said she made a "mistake" in paying the standard rate, based on legal advice she received at the time.
Her resignation raises questions about Sir Keir's judgment after he appeared to suggest on Monday that she had done nothing wrong, and was the victim of a smear campaign.
Sir Keir was asked if Ms Rayner was the victim of a sexist and classist "briefing war", as some of her allies have claimed. He told BBC Radio 5 Live's Matt Chorley: "Angela came from a very humble background, battled all sorts of challenges along the way, and there she is proudly - and I'm proud of her - as our deputy prime minister."
Sir Keir added: "Angela has had people briefing against her and talking her down over and over again. It's a mistake, by the way."
Sources close to Ms Rayner said a conveyancer and two experts in trust law had all suggested the amount of stamp duty she paid on the East Sussex property was correct and she acted on the advice she was given at the time.
However her story unravelled after after the conveyancing firm, Verrico and Associates, on Thursday said its lawyers "never" gave Ms Rayner tax advice and were being made "scapegoats".
In a statement, managing director Joanna Verrico said: "We're not qualified to give advice on trust and tax matters and we advise clients to seek expert advice on these."
The founder of the small high street firm, based in Herne Bay, Kent, said it completed her stamp duty return "based on the figures and the information provided by Ms Rayner".
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