ES News email The latest headlines in your inbox twice a day Monday - Friday plus breaking news updates Enter your email address Continue Please enter an email address Email address is invalid Fill out this field Email address is invalid You already have an account. Please log in Register with your social account or click here to log in I would like to receive lunchtime headlines Monday - Friday plus breaking news alerts, by email Update newsletter preferences

Labour MP Jared O’Mara was suspended today after it emerged he described girls as “sexy little slags”.

The disclosure of even more crude comments by the disgraced MP forced Jeremy Corbyn to withdraw the whip and suspend his membership after two days of holding off action.

Mr O’Mara’s latest shameful writings were unearthed from a music website by the Guido Fawkes blog.

At the time Mr O’Mara was in his “mid-twenties” and on the road to being selected as a Labour candidate.

But writing a review of the band the Arctic Monkeys he described how “teenage girls” will “take home” the group’s bassist to experience his “quick fingered dexterity”.

The new comments were the final straw, coming after two former senior Labour frontbenchers broke ranks by calling for the MP to be suspended over previous remarks, in another music blog in 2009, where he appeared to have written derogatory remarks about taking someone’s virginity, and to describe a sex act with Hollywood star Angelina Jolie.

Labour’s whips indicated earlier that Mr O’Mara would not be suspended unless something worse came to light. Within hours it did.

In the “review” dated November 3, 2004, a “Jared O’Mara” wrote: “When our four troubadours took to the stage their incandescence engulfed all. Indie kids indie-bopped. Sexy Little Slags got on their Dancing Shoes. Scummy men procured pro’s round the corner in Neepsend as Alex immortalised them with his lilting ode.”

His comment about the gig’s audience appeared to be adapted from the band’s track Sexy Little Swine.

A Labour Party spokesperson said he has been suspended from the Labour party pending further investigation. He is expected to vote with the Labour whip, although it has been withdrawn.

Labour was unable to say who will carry out the investigation.

A party statement said: “We can confirm that Jared O’Mara has been suspended pending an investigation.”

The move comes after two Labour MPs today called on Jeremy Corbyn to suspend Jared O’Mara after allegedly calling a constituent an “ugly bitch”.

The Sheffield Hallam MP is reported to have delivered a tirade of abuse to a woman he had been on a date with, four months before he was elected in June. He denies the allegation.

Former shadow education spokesman Lucy Powell was the first to break ranks to say he should be suspended while his behaviour is investigated. She told ITV: “One of the key questions you are asked when you become a candidate for the Labour Party — and you have to sign a contract to say this — is there anything in your past that would bring the party into disrepute? And I don’t understand how in all honesty Jared could have signed that paper.”

Lisa Nandy, former shadow energy secretary, also urged his suspension.

Mr O’Mara, 36, ousted former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg for the Sheffield seat, beating him by 2,125 votes.

He has already been forced to apologise to the party for a series of sexist and homophobic remarks he wrote on an online forum in 2002, and earlier this week resigned from Parliament’s Women and Equalities Select Committee. Labour is now investigating a complaint that he insulted barmaid Sophie Evans before he became an MP. She told the Standard today that she wants him to apologise to her and stop denying the incident.

The pair had one date in March after meeting online but she claims that he verbally abused her after a row in a Sheffield bar. She said he is “totally unfit to be an MP”.

A spokesman for Mr O’Mara said he would not comment while the party probe went on.

Asked about his suspension during Prime Minister's Questions, Theresa May said: "All of us in this House should have due care and attention to the way we refer to other people and should show women in public life the respect they deserve.”