Shrewsbury MP Daniel Kawczynski recommended for one-day suspension from House of Commons

Tory MP Daniel Kawczynski is facing the prospect of a one-day suspension from Parliament for an "insincere" apology he gave in the House of Commons for bullying staff.

Mr Kawczynski, the Conservative MP for for Shrewsbury and Atcham, breached rules for MPs over comments he made before he was forced to apologise for bullying parliamentary staff.

In June last year, Mr Kawczynski was found to have acted in a "threatening and intimidating manner" towards the complainants after he was unable to join a committee hearing due to technical problems.

But the committee found that interviews he gave with local radio and a newspaper before he made the required statement in the Commons meant he had failed to comply as the apology was not "unequivocal".

In its report, the committee said Mr Kawczynski had been required to apologise "unequivocally" for the earlier breach.

The Nationality and Borders Bill is currently being debated in the House of Lords Credit: Tim Ireland/PA

"Although he says he was sincere by the time he made the apology to the House, he had that morning effectively undermined the sincerity of that apology by broadcasting the fact that he was making it because he was required to do so and he disagreed with the way the case had been conducted," the committee said.

"Mr Kawczynski also broke confidentiality requirements by speaking to Radio Shropshire about the content of the report before it was published and identifying complainants’ job descriptions on nine occasions in his radio interview."

The MP for Shrewsbury and Atcham made his original apology in June last year after he was found to have breached rules on bullying and harassment following a complaint by Commons staff.

However, the same day he told an interviewer from BBC Radio Shropshire: "I have no alternative but to apologise because if I don’t apologise then I risk the option of being sanctioned further."

An investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards Kathryn Stone found he also breached confidentiality rules by identifying the complainants through their job titles.

Credit: Press Association

In its report, the committee said Mr Kawczynski’s conduct was particularly serious as it risked undermining the credibility of the independent complaints and grievances scheme for Commons staff which has only recently been established.

Normally it would merit a more serious sanction but the committee acknowledged the mitigating circumstances cited by the MP, including his commitment to work on his “attitude and behaviour”.

It said: "We are persuaded that Mr Kawczynski has been making a sincere attempt to arrive at a better understanding of the roots of his poor behaviour and is genuinely committed to this personal ‘journey’ and to assisting others who may find themselves in the same situation as himself.

"Mr Kawczynski has demonstrated to us that he is contrite. He knows that he was foolish and wrong to speak to the journalists as he did.

"But his contrition does not detract from the fact that his actions caused significant damage to the reputation and integrity of the House of Commons as a whole."