BBC News, Suffolk
An MP has been charged with two counts of sexual assault that allegedly took place at London’s Groucho Club, the Metropolitan Police have said.
Central Suffolk and North Ipswich Conservative MP Patrick Spencer is accused of the attacks in August 2023 – before he was elected.
The 37-year-old will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on 16 June.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said it had authorised charges relating to “two alleged incidents involving two separate women” at the private members’ club.
“On 13 March 2025, a man attended a voluntary interview at a London police station,” the Met Police said.
“Patrick Spencer has since been charged with two counts of sexual assault and will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Monday, 16 June.”
‘Evidence review’
On his website, Spencer says he lives in Suffolk with his family.
He was not an MP at the time of the alleged attacks, having been elected to parliament in July 2024.
Frank Ferguson, head of the special crime and counter terrorism division at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), said: “Following a review of the evidence provided by the Metropolitan Police Service, we have authorised two counts of sexual assault against Patrick Spencer MP.
“The charges follow two alleged incidents involving two separate women at the Groucho Club in central London in August 2023.”
A Conservative Party spokesman confirmed that Spencer had been suspended.
He said in a statement that the party “believes in integrity and high standards”.
“We have taken immediate action,” the spokesman said.
“Patrick Spencer MP has been suspended from the Conservative Party, and the whip withdrawn, with immediate effect.
“The Conservative Party cannot comment further on an ongoing legal case.”
It is understood that Spencer was asked not to attend the parliamentary estate by the Tories’ chief whip while police carried out their investigation.
‘Moral probity’
Spencer was elected as the MP for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich in July 2024 with a majority of 4,290.
Before he entered the Commons, he worked in finance for the private equity firm IPGL, a company chaired by his father, former Conservative Party treasurer Lord Michael Spencer.
He later took a job at the Centre for Social Justice think tank and then became a senior adviser at the Department for Education.
Spencer made his maiden speech in July during a debate on the MPs’ code of conduct relating to second jobs.
He said then that the “most important thing to the people across my constituency” was “restoring a sense of moral probity and public spiritedness to our political system”.