‘It’s rather rude’: Truss accused of trying to poach members of rival Tory club

A picture


For Tory grandees licking their wounds and plotting their return after their disastrous 2024 general election performance, the opulent, fire-lit rooms of the exclusive club 5 Hertford Street are a sanctuary.But in recent weeks, their long lunches have been rudely interrupted by Liz Truss, who has been accused of wandering the premises in search of members to poach for her own rival operation, just one street away, which asks “founding members” for an eye-watering £500,000.The former prime minister’s alleged headhunting is understood to have irritated those who run the Mayfair club, including its owner, Robin Birley, the entrepreneur and son of Annabel Goldsmith and the nightclub owner Mark Birley.A friend of his said: “It is rather rude, but at £500k, we are rather better value.” Membership of 5 Hertford Street is a relative snip at less than £2,000 a year.

On a recent December afternoon, the bauble-bedecked club bursting at the seams with Conservative big hitters and their sequin-clad guests, a member asked the Guardian: “Who would pay half a million to hang out with Liz Truss?”The Leconfield was dreamed up by Truss and the property tycoon Robert Tchenguiz, who is transforming his Curzon Street offices for the venture,Unlike 5 Hertford Street, with its gleaming, blood-red facade, Leconfield House is a fairly run-down office block opposite a William Hill betting shop,While 5 Hertford Street is known for its swish sushi bar, fairy light-lit cigar terrace and friendly staff who will bring you the most expensive club sandwich you have ever eaten on a silver platter, Truss is championing no such trimmings in her pitch for new members,Her new club will be a “strategic nexus for a global network of pro-growth leaders”, she declares on its website, where she is heralded as the “56th prime minister of the United Kingdom”,The venue will be “a secure ecosystem where you can operate with others at the forefront of technology, policy and capital,” she adds.

Business dealings and political ventures – including Truss’s own leadership campaign – are frequently schemed up in the plush meeting rooms of what insiders call “5H”.However, the club does not market itself as a “unique business centre”, rather a social club where deals are struck on the side.While Nigel Farage is among those to have visited, the club has long been the home of the libertarian side of the Tory party, with Boris Johnson, Zac Goldsmith (Birley’s half-brother), Priti Patel and Truss herself often seen within.Its rooms, decorated in maximalist style with rare paintings jostling for space on the walls, have been a sanctuary for her in turbulent times.Its owners have allowed her to host events, and while trade secretary, Truss notoriously demanded to have a £3,000 lunch there with the trade envoy to the former US president Joe Biden on the taxpayer’s dime.

While 5H are understood to be mildly peeved that she is taking advantage of their hospitality to drum up support for a rival club just a two-minute walk away, it is not feared that she will make a dent in their business ventures.It is also believed to be unlikely that regular visitors including Harry Styles, Leonardo DiCaprio, Prince William and Margot Robbie will be swapping 5H for the Truss club any time soon.One former cabinet minister and member of 5H simply laughed when asked if he would become a “founder member” of the Leconfield, and that is understood to be the general attitude among loyalists to the existing club.The transformation of Leconfield House into Truss’s lair is the latest attempt by Tchenguiz to revamp the property.In 2022, he was foiled by the Planning Inspectorate in his attempt to turn the building into a 70-bedroom luxury hotel with a spa.

Last year, he enlisted top architects to transform Leconfield into high-end flats, extravagantly priced at £7,500 a sq ft.Finally, the tycoon has bet on Truss to help him make the building into, as the website claims, a “beacon of sophistication and elegance”.Truss did not respond to a request for comment.
politicsSee all
A picture

UK aid cuts take 40% from funds to counter Russian threat in western Balkans

Keir Starmer’s raid on overseas aid has led to a 40% cut in funds for countering Russian aggression and misinformation in a region of Europe described by the prime minister as vital to the UK’s national security.British funding committed to bolstering the western Balkans, where Russia has been accused of sowing division and creating destabilisation, has been cut from £40m last year to £24m for 2025-26.The Integrated Security Fund (ISF) is designed to tackle the highest priority threats to the UK’s national security at home and overseas.Starmer recently described the western Balkans region, encompassing Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia, as “Europe’s crucible – the place where the security of our continent is put to the test”.Last year’s ISF funds were used in part to counter and respond to malicious cyber-attacks in the region and to bolster democratic institutions and independent media

A picture

‘It’s rather rude’: Truss accused of trying to poach members of rival Tory club

For Tory grandees licking their wounds and plotting their return after their disastrous 2024 general election performance, the opulent, fire-lit rooms of the exclusive club 5 Hertford Street are a sanctuary.But in recent weeks, their long lunches have been rudely interrupted by Liz Truss, who has been accused of wandering the premises in search of members to poach for her own rival operation, just one street away, which asks “founding members” for an eye-watering £500,000.The former prime minister’s alleged headhunting is understood to have irritated those who run the Mayfair club, including its owner, Robin Birley, the entrepreneur and son of Annabel Goldsmith and the nightclub owner Mark Birley. A friend of his said: “It is rather rude, but at £500k, we are rather better value.” Membership of 5 Hertford Street is a relative snip at less than £2,000 a year

A picture

UK politics: ‘Not clear’ who was behind FCDO hack, says minister, amid reports of China link – as it happened

Good morning.The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office was hacked in October, according to trade minister Chris Bryant.Details of the hack emerged on Friday in a report by the Sun that claimed a Chinese hacker group was behind the cyber-attack.The Sun named Storm 1849 as the Chinese cyber gang responsible for the breach, which it said was understood to possibly include tens of thousands of visa details.The group has been “accused of targeting politicians and groups critical of the Chinese government”, the newspaper said

A picture

UK Foreign Office victim of cyber-attack in October, says Chris Bryant

The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office was hacked in October, a minister has said.Chris Bryant, a trade minister in Keir Starmer’s government, told Sky News there was a low risk to “any individual” from the cyber-attack.Details of the hack emerged on Friday in a report by the Sun that claimed a Chinese hacking group was behind it.But Bryant told broadcasters it was “not clear” who perpetrated the attack and cautioned against speculation. “There certainly has been a hack at the FCDO and we’ve been aware of that since October,” Bryant told Sky News

A picture

Society of Editors decries Starmer’s plan to reduce media scrutiny of No 10

The Society of Editors has raised concerns about Keir Starmer’s plan to reduce scrutiny of No 10 by political journalists, saying it risks weakening transparency.The body, which represents news organisations, said regular, open and robust questioning was a cornerstone of democracy and that the plan to reduce briefings was deeply concerning.Downing Street’s director of communications, Tim Allan, unveiled the plan on Thursday without consulting the group of political journalists known as the lobby who traditionally attend briefings twice a day to question the prime minister’s spokesperson.Allan said the government would be reducing the briefings to one a day, and would sometimes replace the single briefing with a press conference.Held at 9 Downing Street, lobby briefings are on the record but not broadcast

A picture

Reform-run Kent council accused of blocking scrutiny of claim it saved £40m

Reform-run Kent council has been accused of trying to block scrutiny after it refused, for more than five months, to produce evidence that it had saved more than £40m by cancelling two environmental projects that did not exist yet.Polly Billington, a Labour MP in Kent, first requested background to the claim via a freedom of information (FoI) request in July. She said the subsequent delay had not been explained and seemed to show the council was embarrassed at what the documents would show.Kent county council said it rejected any suggestion of a cover-up, and that it planned to release the information to Billington, the East Thanet MP, later this week.The saga began when the Kent leader, Linden Kemkaran, told a council meeting on 10 July that the authority had saved £32m by scrapping a programme to make properties more environmentally friendly, and £7