British lawmaker to quit seat over Nazi-themed party
Published February 6, 2014
(JTA) — A British lawmaker who arranged a Nazi-themed bachelor party in France and was reprimanded by his political party announced he will not run for reelection.
“After a difficult time I have decided to announce I will stand down at the next general election,” Aiden Burley of the Tory Party announced on Wednesday, The Guardian reported.
The announcement comes just two weeks after an internal party investigation of the December 2011 event determined that Burley’s actions were neither racist nor anti-Semitic.
Burley was dismissed in December 2011 as parliamentary private secretary for Transport Secretary Justine Greening a week after photos of his presence at the stag party at a French ski resort came to light.
At least one party participant dressed up in an SS officer’s uniform, and the guests toasted to the Nazi Party and the Third Reich. Burley had purchased the uniform and brought it to the party.
It is illegal in France to wear or exhibit in public Nazi-era memorabilia or copies of such memorabilia. Burley told investigators that he did not know it was illegal to wear such memorabilia in France, since it is not illegal in the United Kingdom.
Burley, who was elected to the House of Commons as a member of Parliament in 2010, offered an “unreserved, wholehearted and fulsome apology” in a letter to the London-based Jewish Chronicle newspaper.
Following an investigation by French prosecutors, the groom was fined for wearing the SS uniform, and also was required to donate money to an organization representing the families of Holocaust victims.