Mother of Daughters makes tentative return to Instagram on husband's account

Fans are calling for the disgraced parenting blogger to reinstate her account 
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Lucy Pavia8 January 2020

In November last year the parenting blogger world was rocked when one of its queen bees - Clemmie Hooper, aka Mother of Daughters - unmasked herself as an Internet troll .

Clemmie revealed she had been posting derogatory and racially-fuelled comments under the pseudonym Alice In Wanderlust on the controversial gossip site, Tattle Life.

Some of the comments even targeted her husband Simon, who runs his own successful Instagram platform, Father of Daughters.

Instagram/Clemmie Hooper

Other users began to suspect Alice and Clemmie were the same person when they both appeared to be on holiday in the same location.

Following the fallout, Clemmie took to Instagram stories to apologise and explain she created Alice to "protect my family and I" but things had quickly got out of hand as she got "lost online."

(Clemmie Hooper)

Her husband, Simon, said he had no knowledge of her actions and told his followers at the time that he felt "angry and a bit sad."

Clemmie's account, Mother of Daughters has since been deleted, and she appeared to go offline completely.

But is she testing the waters for a tentative comeback? Over the festive period, Simon posted a photo of the pair together, describing Christmas with extended family and their four daughters - the first time he had posted an image of his wife since the scandal broke.

On Tuesday, Simon also shared shots of Clemmie on a New Year holiday in Tenerife with their four children.

Fans of the couple welcomed Clemmie's appearance on Simon's account. "Clemmie is back, miss her!" wrote one user, while another asked, "When is Clemmie coming back?"

It's currently unclear if she will reinstate her own defunct Instagram account, where she had over 700,000 followers.

As a working midwife, she could also be facing disciplinary action from the Nursing and Midwifery Council, who were alerted to her anonymous posts in November.

"We've had some messages over the weekend regarding one individual['s] online conduct as reported in the media" the NMC council tweeted, "Please be assured we have passed all these messages onto the relevant teams here at the NMC."

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