The UK's Gambling Commission is investigating Conservative candidate Laura Saunders and her husband, Tony Lee, over alleged illegal bets about the general election's timing.
Lee, the Conservative Party's director of campaigning, has taken a leave of absence while the Commission conducts its investigation.
The Tories have chosen a marvelous time to expose their corrupt nature. If being on track to achieve their worst election results in a century wasn't enough, high-level parliamentarians have now added criminal acts into the mix. Sunak was already prepared to leave office as a disgraced former prime minister, and now he'll do so with yet another stain on his government's record.
These handful of politicians don't represent their party or their law-abiding colleagues. As Sunak was working hard to lead the Tories into a tight race, Williams, Saunders, and this officer selfishly made his job harder. If the Gambling Commission finds these allegations to be true, those at fault should be rejected by all Conservatives.
Unfortunately for the British, the Labour Party doesn't seem eager to fix the UK's corruption problems should they win the election. The party has backtracked on several of its previously proposed ethics policies, from a five-year ban on working as consultants after leaving office to barring current MPs from working second jobs. Both parties seem to enjoy using their public status to enrich themselves.