Another Tory disgraced MP faces a ban in the Commons for clashing with the sleaze monitordog.

Daniel Kawczynski – a parliamentary neighbour and political ally of scandal-hit Owen Paterson – was ordered to say sorry after Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone found him guilty of bullying.

After he was unable to join a virtual meeting, he railed at the staffers and made baseless complaints when drunk.

He also admitted that he didn’t mean to apologize and was just trying to get out of being removed from the House.

Because of the insincere remarks he made in the Commons chamber on June 6, Mr Kawczynski has been under investigation by Miss Stone again for the second consecutive time in five month.

Daniel Kawczynski (pictured) ¿ a parliamentary neighbour and political ally of scandal-hit Owen Paterson ¿ was ordered to say sorry after Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone found him guilty of bullying

Daniel Kawczynski (pictured) – a parliamentary neighbour and political ally of scandal-hit Owen Paterson – was ordered to say sorry after Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone found him guilty of bullying

This time he is accused of ‘actions causing significant damage to the reputation of the House’ and faces a more severe punishment if he is found to have breached the MPs’ Code of Conduct. Miss Stone’s ruling on Mr Kawczynski is expected shortly.

This is just the latest controversy involving the MP. His seat at Atcham and Shrewsbury borders Mr Paterson’s North Shropshire constituency.

Kawczynski, a Tory MP, voted to keep his Brexiteer friend from being subject to a Commons ban against lobbying.

As harassment claims against women rose in parliament, 2017 saw reports that he had once forced a young female researcher for Parliament to meet a wealthy friend.

As a result of his insincere speech in the Commons chamber in June, Mr Kawczynski is under investigation again by Standards Commissioner Kathryn Stone for the second time in five months

Because of the insincere remarks he made in June in the Commons, Kathryn Stone (Standards Commissioner) is investigating Mr Kawczynski for the second consecutive time.

Deputy Speaker and fellow Tory, Dame Eleanor Laing, who employed the female aide, angrily confronted Mr Kawczynski over his ‘inappropriate behaviour’.

In June, he received a standard report that shamed him for his behavior at the beginning of the pandemic.

Following his inability to participate in the April 2020 committee meeting via video link, Mr Kawczynski complained repeatedly to the support staff.

He kept phoning one of the committee staff, telling him ‘this is a scandal, an outrage’, ‘you are useless’ and branding him part of the ‘snowflake generation’.

Later he rang one of the committee workers’ managers ‘whilst under the influence of alcohol’ in an ‘inappropriate’ attempt to make a ‘meritless complaint’ about them.

He was found to have acted in a ‘threatening and intimidating manner’.

The Standards Commissioner concluded that Mr Kawczynski’s behaviour amounted to bullying and was made worse by his ‘abuse of power’ and ‘lack of contrition’.

His Independent Expert Panel told him to apologize. This panel decides whether or not there should be any sanctions.

But he appealed, claiming he faced ‘serious difficulties’ in his constituency, partly as a result of a flooding crisis, but also because of his 6ft 9in height, which makes him the tallest MP.

His height made him ‘very conspicuous’ and he had come under ‘repeated attack by members of the public’, he claimed.

Mr Kawczynski (second from right) is a parliamentary neighbour and political ally of scandal-hit Owen Paterson (far right)

Kawczynski, second from right), is a neighbor in parliament and an ally to scandal-hit Owen Paterson.

Mr Kawczynski’s appeal was rejected and he was ordered to make a public apology on the floor of the House, in which he said: ‘I did not swear nor raise my voice but my behaviour led to two complaints.

‘I have reflected on my behaviour, I accept it constituted bullying and as such was entirely inexcusable.’

But on the same day he told BBC Radio Shropshire: ‘I must apologise because if I don’t apologise then I risk the option of being sanctioned further – namely being suspended from the House of Commons or expelled from the House of Commons.’

At the same time he told a national newspaper that making the apology was ‘something I am going to have to do’ and he would ‘use the script he had been provided’ – although he denied it meant he was doing it ‘with his fingers crossed behind his back’.

Mr Kawczynski first gained notoriety in 2013 when he told a one-legged drug addict outside Westminster tube station to stop begging and ‘get a job’.

David Cameron was his adviser in Eastern Europe. The MP also came under fire for supporting Saudi Arabia.

He was sentenced last year for attending a conference attended by Right-wing populists Viktor Orban from Hungary and Matteo Salvini, Italy.

M. Kawczynski refused to comment.