MATT Hancock will reportedly NOT accept £16,000 in severance pay after quitting in disgrace over his fling with Gina Coladangelo.
The Health Secretary, 42, resigned amid mounting pressure over images of him kissing and cuddling the aide in breach of Covid restrictions.
Follow our Matt Hancock live blog for all the latest updates on his affair
And despite admitting he had “let down” millions who had made painful sacrifices during the pandemic he is, in theory, eligible for thousands of pounds.
However, the Daily Telegraph understands Mr Hancock will not take the severance payments.
Any decisions to take severance pay outs are published in annual parliamentary accounts – so the actual answer may not be known until next summer.
Ministers under 65 who leave office – whether they are sacked or resign – are entitled to a quarter of their yearly salary under the 1991 Ministerial and other Pensions and Salaries Act.
It comes as…
- Hancock announced he was resigning almost 48 hours after his affair with his aide was exposed
- The Health Secretary told his wife he was leaving her as the affair was revealed
- Gina Coladangelo has left her position on the Department of Health board after the affair with Hancock
- Read Matt Hancock’s resignation letter in full
- Boris Johnson told Hancock ‘you should be proud of what you’ve achieved’ as he accepted his resignation
- Sajid Javid will be the new Health Secretary
The salary for a Secretary of State is £67,505 which would in theory mean a possible payout of £16,876.
Hancock finally fell on his sword on Saturday night penning a resignation letter to the Prime Minister.
Support for him had been dwindling after it emerged he told his wife he was leaving her shortly after he learned his affair with married Coladangelo was about to be exposed.
Martha Hancock had no idea her husband was having an affair until he broke the news and announced their marriage was over, reports the Times.
Friends of the former Health Secretary say his relationship with Gina is “recent but serious”.
Observers were quick to point out that he did not specifically mention his wife in his resignation letter to the Prime Minister.
He wrote: “I am writing to resign as Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. We have worked so hard as a country to fight the pandemic.