The suspension exceeds the 10-day threshold that would trigger a recall petition in his Tamworth seat if MPs approve it.
This could pave the way for a by-election if more than 10% of constituents sign it.
The Commons Standards Committee in July recommended a lengthy suspension for Mr Pincher after it found the MPās conduct last summer was āprofoundly damagingā and amounted to an abuse of power.
His actions were described as āunwanted, inappropriate and upsettingā, in what amounted to an āegregious case of sexual misconductā.
Boris Johnsonās handling of the row over his former chief whip was the final nail in the coffin of his premiership, triggering his resignation last year after an exodus of ministers from his administration.
Mr Pincher, who remains MP for Tamworth, lodged an appeal against the committeeās findings arguing it was disproportionate.
READ MORE: Rishi Sunak hit by double whammy by-election nightmare on MPsā first day back
However, Parliamentās watchdog, the Independent Expert Panel (IEP), on Monday dismissed his appeal and upheld the Standards Committeeās recommended sanction.
The IEPās report said: āWe consider that the appellantās arguments are misconceived or erroneous. The sanction is far from being arbitrary or disproportionate.ā
Mr Pincher did not appeal against the Standards Committeeās conclusion that he had broken the MPsā code of conduct by behaving in a way that would cause āsignificant damage to the reputation and integrityā of the Commons.
But he argued in his appeal submission that his behaviour had not damaged Parliamentās reputation as he had spoken at the private members club as a minister rather than as an MP.
He resigned as a Government whip after the incident and subsequently lost the Tory whip, meaning he now sits in the Commons as an independent.
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Mr Pincher, who has already indicated he will not seek re-election, could choose to stand down as an MP following the appeal decision, which would automatically trigger a contest in his Staffordshire constituency.
His suspension could leave Rishi Sunak facing a tricky double by-election as the Conservatives languish in the national polls.
Former culture secretary Nadine Dorriesā bitter exit last week means one is set to take place this autumn in her Mid Bedfordshire seat.
Mr Pincher has been comfortably voted for by Tamworth since 2010, and he won a 19,634 vote majority at the last general election.
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