Kemi Badenoch has said hacking into Harriet Harman’s website when she was younger is “not the same” as Rachel Reeves failing to get a £900 rental licence for her home.
The Tory leader, who has called for the chancellor to go for breaking the law, told Sky News’ deputy political editor Sam Coates she was not an MP in 2008 when she got into Labour peer Baroness Harman’s website and changed it so it was pro-Conservative.
Politics latest: Reeves told she has to go after breaking law
Hacking into websites is a criminal offence and can be punishable with a fine or up to a two-year prison sentence for minor offences, or life imprisonment for the most serious.
Asked if she had ever broken the law, Ms Badenoch said: “I don’t believe that I have, but if I had done so, if I had done so when I was in government, then I would have been sacked or I would have been forced to resign.”
But reminded of her hacking episode, she said: “This was something I did in my 20s.
“We’re not talking about something that Rachel Reeves did in her 20s, we’re talking about something she’s doing as chancellor, after she became chancellor.
“It is not the same thing at all.”
She said people should not “try and draw a false equivalence” and said she guessed Baroness Harman’s password to enter the website, adding it was “a summary offence, like speeding”.
“This is whataboutery, we have a government of people who are repeatedly breaking the law,” she added.
Ms Reeves has said she was not aware she needed a rental licence, required in some areas, to let out her family home in Dulwich, southeast London, after she moved to Downing Street when she was made chancellor.
She has now applied for a licence and apologised to Sir Keir Starmer, who has said that is adequate and there is no need for an investigation.
But Ms Badenoch…

