Anti-FGM campaigner Nimco Ali wrote on Twitter: “I love the MP, minister or staffer who took the time to buy toy dinosaurs and stick them on a ribbon to hang on Chope’s door.
“You are the fanny hero of the year and it means the world to me and those of us fighting to #endfgm.”
FGM has been illegal for 34 years, she added. “Adding FGM to the Children Act was about protection for little girls.
“Little girls who cannot speak up for themselves but Chope took the said [side] of women who said protection could cause offence.”
In a letter to Tory association members published by the Bournemouth Echo on Monday, Chope said he had objected to the bill in order to ensure it was subjected to “appropriate levels of scrutiny”.
“We have to wake up to the need to jettison antiquated, opaque procedures in this place,” he added.
Arguing that one anti-FGM campaigner had told him the bill could lead to “much injustice and family trauma” if the powers within it were used improperly, Chope said there had been a “predictable Twitter storm” following his objection.
The dinosaur display on Chope’s door is not the first time his Westminster office has been the centre of suspected protests.
In July, knickers, thongs and a suspender belt were left outside of his office after he blocked legislation to make upskirting illegal.