London: UK Home Secretary Priti Patel is set to be cleared by an internal review into allegations that she bullied civil servants in the Home Office and other government departments she led, according to a UK media report.
While the official status of the inquiry remains as "ongoing", Patel's allies have claimed that officials had reviewed all the information and found no evidence against the senior Indian-origin Cabinet minister.
The Daily Telegraph' on Wednesday said, the report by Sir Mark Sedwill, the Cabinet Secretary, was completed within the last week and presented to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on his return to 10 Downing Street on Monday after his recovery from coronavirus.
I was categoric in the inquiry that there was no allegation against her, nor was she investigated at the time, former minister Ian Duncan Smith, who worked with Patel in the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) when she was employment minister, told the newspaper.
The internal investigation was ordered by Johnson under the UK's ministerial code of conduct as a scandal erupted around the senior-most Home Office civil servant, Sir Philip Rutnam, who dramatically resigned pointing the finger of blame at Patel.
He has since launched separate legal proceedings against the minister and the Home Office for unfair constructive dismissal.
As it emerged that the internal Cabinet Office review found nothing to support allegations that Patel bullied staff at the Home Office, DWP or Department for International Trade or that she breached the ministerial code by doing so, the Opposition demanded that the findings be made public.