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British immigration minister resigns

LONDON - Britain's immigration minister has resigned over the illegal employment of a foreign cleaner, a major gaffe given the government's muscular clampdown on immigration of all kinds.

LONDON - Britain's immigration minister has resigned over the illegal employment of a foreign cleaner, a major gaffe given the government's muscular clampdown on immigration of all kinds.

Cameron's Downing Street office said in a statement released Saturday afternoon that there was no indication that the minister, Mark Harper, knew the cleaner was working illegally but said the leader accepted the resignation "with regret." It also distributed Harper's resignation letter, in which he explained that he thought he had verified in 2007 that the unnamed cleaner's passport and documentation meant she could work in Britain legally.

But he said officials warned him Thursday that she was in the country illegally, forcing his hand. "Although I complied with the law at all times, I consider that as immigration minister, who is taking legislation through Parliament which will toughen up our immigration laws, I should hold myself to a higher standard than expected of others," he said in the letter.

The case has an echo of the U.S. "Nannygate" scandal, in which then-President Bill Clinton's top pick for attorney general was forced to withdraw her nomination in 1993 after it was revealed her family employed a maid who was in the country illegally.

But Harper's resignation is even more embarrassing because he was specifically tasked with policing Britain's shores, a hot-button issue in an island nation where many are weary of immigration.

Harper's department oversaw the deployment of a van that patrolled London's streets warning migrants who had overstayed their visas to "go home or face arrest." The van, emblazoned with large handcuffs, was withdrawn following an outcry.