PMQs: Watch As Theresa May Apologises For Attacking Ill Labour MP's Commons Absence

“I apologise unreservedly for that comment.”
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Theresa May was left red-faced today for attacking a Labour MP for not being in the Commons – when she was actually on sick leave.

During a ding-dong battle with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn over NHS funding, May began quoting an interview from Shadow Education Secretary Angela Rayner where she described her party’s economic plans as “shit-or-bust”.

The Prime Minister pointedly remarked that Rayner was not sitting on the opposition front bench for Prime Minister’s Questions, in a bid to further embarrass the Labour leadership.

After opposition MPs shouted back that Rayner was undergoing medical treatment, May was forced to bring her attack to a halt and apologise.

A spokesman for Jeremy Corbyn said he believed the Tory whips were told about Rayner’s week-long absence, but a speaking after PMQs a Conservative spokesman was “not aware” if the information had been passed on.

Addressing Corbyn this afternoon, May said: “What do we know about the Labour Party’s economic policies? Well we were told all about them from the description from the Shadow Education Secretary who I see is not in her place on the front bench today.”

After being informed that Rayner was absent on health grounds, May said: “I do apologise, I did not realise the Shadow Education Secretary was herself undergoing medical treatment.

“I apologise unreservedly for that comment.”

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Labour's Shadow Education Secretary Angela Rayner
PA Wire/PA Images

Rayner’s comments about Labour’s economic policy came in an interview with The Spectator, in which she justified plans to raise taxes and increase public spending.

She said: “We are in different times, radical times where we need to have a real investment in Britain’s future. Genuinely. I don’t mean that as a slogan, I mean it as an economic strategy.

“It is a bit of a shit-or-bust strategy, I get that. It’s a high-risk strategy.

“But all of Britain’s great advancements in the past have been because we’ve had the gumption to take a risk.”

Asked after PMQs if the Tory whips had been informed of Rayner’s absence, a spokesman for the Labour leader said: “As I understand it, they were told she was off sick this week.”

He added: “I think she’ll be back next week.”

Asked about the incident, a Number 10 political spokesman said: “I’m not aware of whether the whips were informed or not.”