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Scots Tory MP Ross Thomson will not stand at next month's general election with the announcement coming just hours after he denied claims he groped a Labour MP in a Westminster bar.

On Sunday, Glasgow North East Labour MP Paul Sweeney said he was speaking out about the alleged incident - which he referred to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards - because he fears no action will be taken before the General Election on December 12.

Thomson, who led Boris Johnson's Conservative Party leadership campaign north of the border, strongly denies the Labour MP's account of events, accusing Sweeney of making "entirely false allegations for the purpose of political point-scoring".

But he also revealed he will not stand for his Aberdeen South seat in December's crunch poll.

In a statement on Twitter, he said: "This is a political smear and I will continue to fight to clear my name. I will see this investigatory process through to a conclusion.

"I have suffered a level of personal abuse that has affected my health, my mental wellbeing and my staff. It has been a level of abuse that I never imagined possible.

"I have therefore made the most difficult decision that I could ever make. I have decided that I will stand down as the Scottish Conservative and Unionist candidate for Aberdeen South."

It came after a spokesman for Sweeney said that with a General Election approaching, he felt it was "important that voters in Thomson's constituency should be aware of his behaviour".

Sweeney told the Scottish Mail on Sunday that Thomson had grabbed at him in the Strangers' bar in the House of Commons in October 2018, and then tried to put his hands down the front of his trousers.

The Glasgow North East MP told the paper: "I felt paralysed. It was just such a shocking thing. I was in a cold sweat, it was mortifying.

"In the back of my mind, I was thinking that if I just punched the guy, who knows where that could end up when there's a bar full of journalists. I couldn't fight, so I took flight."

He added: "I sat on this for ages because I didn't want to make a fuss out of it. But when I go into the chamber and he's there doing a speech, it's still there - that intimidation. He knows, and I know, what went on there."

Thomson said that he had provided a detailed account of events on the night to Westminster's standards watchdog, as he insisted he was a "fit and proper person to be an MP".

(Image: Daily Record)

He told the Scottish Mail on Sunday: "This has been a confidential process, and confidential for a reason to protect people who are genuine victims, and I have co-operated fully with the standards investigation even though I knew the allegations against me were completely false.

"Given that Paul Sweeney has broken this confidentially, I have no choice but to defend myself."

The Aberdeen South MP said: "The process is still going on and I find it very surprising that after several months of this process, Paul Sweeney has decided to go public at this time in making entirely false allegations for the purpose of political point-scoring."

A spokesman for Sweeney said: "This assault, which took place last October, was reported to the appropriate authorities after similar but entirely separate allegations were made by other men against Ross Thomson in February.

"In light of the failure of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards to resolve this matter before the General Election Mr Sweeney feels it is important that voters in Thomson's constituency should be aware of his behaviour as their representative at Westminster."

The spokesman added: "Thomson's denials today fly in the face of what was witnessed by other MPs and visitors and show him to be utterly unrepentant. It is time for him to face up to his behaviour and accept that he is unfit to hold public office."