Tory MP's inbox 'exploded' during Dominic Cummings row

Image caption, Stephen Crabb says there were "lots of very concerned and angry emails"

A Welsh Conservative MP said it felt like his email inbox exploded after reports the prime minister's senior adviser had driven hundreds of miles during lockdown.

Stephen Crabb said he received "about 700 emails" about the issue from constituents.

Mr Cummings said he acted reasonably and legally.

Mr Crabb said he had been confronted by a member of the public when he travelled from his constituency back to Westminster after recess, who accused him of having "as much regard for the rules as that Dominic Cummings".

But the MP for Preseli Pembrokeshire said the response from constituents was nothing compared to correspondence on Brexit.

Image source, Reuters

Image caption, Dominic Cummings is Boris Johnson's senior adviser

Mr Crabb has said Mr Cummings was "wrong to arrogantly brush away the allegations when they first appeared", and previously said he would have preferred a proper inquiry.

"We had about 700 emails about this issue from constituents and that is a large number," he told 91热爆 Wales.

Mr Crabb said: "It felt like the email inbox was exploding at one point with lots of very concerned and angry emails.

"There were a lot of people who were pensioners talking about their own experiences of being grandparents not being able to see their wider family over the last few months.

"That sense of fair play - it's not fair that someone else can get to travel outside the rules and maybe have a day trip with their family when so many other people have been doing their very best to stick to the rules, and that's meant a lot of sacrifices on their part."

He added, however, that these emails were "nothing" compared to the "thousands" of emails he received from both Remainers and Brexiteers about Brexit "twelve months ago", and said he was encouraged people were "wanting to get in touch with their MPs".

'How raw people feel'

Mr Crabb said a member of the public stopped him on his return to Westminster after Whitsun recess from his constituency in Pembrokeshire.

"I was driving back to Westminster. It was the first time I'd been outside Wales for months and I stopped at services on the M4. A chap started shouting at me, he had a Welsh accent and obviously recognised who I was.

"He swore and told me that 'I've got about as much regard for the rules as that Dominic Cummings'.

"So I had an exchange of words with him and asked this man what he thought I was doing. He accused me of zig-zagging across the country. I said I was travelling from my constituency to Westminster my place of work.

"I think it was an indication of how raw people feel about that - the fact someone felt they could come up to me in quite a public place and make those accusations.

"It's important for politicians to be sensitive to that and a group of us have spoken to the prime minister about that."