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Badenoch accused of ‘interfering’ in lobbying scandal linked to Cameron

about 8 hours ago
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Lex Greensill has accused Kemi Badenoch of “interfering” in an insolvency case “for political ends” as the last Conservative government sought to protect David Cameron from scrutiny for his involvement in a lobbying scandal.The financier, whose companies paid Cameron millions of pounds, claimed that the current Tory leader used her former ministerial position as business secretary to restructure an inquiry into his activities.Greensill alleged that the move was made to protect Cameron as he was elevated to the House of Lords in November 2023 and brought back into government as the foreign secretary.The allegations were made in a letter sent to the current business secretary, Peter Kyle, as Greensill contests the possibility of being disqualified from company directorships for up to 15 years.Greensill claimed the decision to omit Cameron’s involvement from the Insolvency Services’s inquiries meant the case against him should be dropped because it was “based on allegations that have no merit and little or no evidence”.

In the letter, Greensill accused Badenoch of overseeing an insolvency case in 2023 that was structured to deliberately exclude scrutiny of Cameron’s role.rIn the letter, sent on 28 October, Greensill asked Kyle to re-evaluate the insolvency case against him in light of claims of government interference.“I honestly believe on the basis of the facts that Mrs Badenoch and the previous Conservative government interfered in this case for political ends.Their motive was to deflect from allegations that could implicate Lord Cameron in any suggestion of wrongdoing,” Greensill wrote.“This excised that part of the companies’ [Greensill group] activities with which he was so closely involved so that he could be elevated to the House of Lords and the position of foreign secretary, without at the same time being embroiled in these proceedings.

“In so doing the resulting case against me is based on allegations that have no merit and little or no evidence to support them,I invite you to investigate these matters,”Greensill, a banker with farming roots in rural Australia, was given access to the heart of government during Cameron’s tenure at No 10,In 2012, Greensill shared business cards showing that he had an official No 10 email address and was working under the title “senior adviser” in the prime minister’s office,Greensill then hired the former prime minister as an adviser in 2018.

After the UK wing of the Greensill group went into administration in March 2021, Cameron was widely criticised for using contacts made while prime minister to personally lobby politicians and senior civil servants on the group’s behalf,He sent WhatsApp messages to the then chancellor, Rishi Sunak, and text messages to a former top Treasury civil servant, Sir Tom Scholar, during the height of the Covid pandemic,Greensill’s collapse led to criminal investigations that are continuing in the UK, Germany and Switzerland,Cameron’s conduct is not thought to be the subject of those investigations,Badenoch was the business secretary in 2023 when the Insolvency Service launched an inquiry into Lex Greensill and began proceedings to disqualify him from managing a UK firm.

The collapse of Greensill Capital (UK), according to evidence provided by the Insolvency Service, came about because of its exposure to the Gupta Family Group (GFG), Greensill’s letter said.Cameron was a senior adviser to GSUK, whose roles included lobbying ministers to bring about the authorisation of Greensill Capital as an approved lender under the coronavirus large business interruption loan scheme.The Insolvency Service’s inquiries into his dealings before November 2023, when Cameron became foreign secretary, scrutinised Greensill’s dealings with GFG, Greensill has claimed.But after November 2023, the Insolvency Service’s interests in GFG were dropped, thus excluding Cameron’s involvement, according to sources close to Greensill.“It is clear that the decision to structure the case in this manner was taken by the IS in its decision to serve notice of proceedings against me on 15 November 2023.

This was within days of the Rt Hon David Cameron (as he then was) being appointed to the cabinet as foreign secretary and shortly before his elevation to the House of Lords,” Greensill wrote.Cameron was formally appointed to the position as foreign secretary on 13 November 2023.The Insolvency Service has since admitted data breaches after a press officer spoke to a Times journalist about their inquiries into Greensill days after Cameron’s appointment.Cameron’s office has declined to comment.The Conservative party has been approached for comment.

A government spokesperson said: “As this is an ongoing matter, we would not comment.”
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Lammy says he was not ‘equipped with the details’ when facing questions on mistaken prisoner release at PMQs – as it happened

David Lammy has recorded a pooled interview about the prisoner release mistakes reveaved after yesterday’s PMQs. There were three main lines in the excerpt available so far.Lammy, the deputy PM and justice secretary, defended his decision to dodge questions at PMQs yesterday about whether there had been another prisoner let out by mistake. The Conservatives have strongly criticised him for this, with Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, saying that Lammy’s non-answer was “dishonest”, and Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary, saying Lammy’s PMQs performance was “a disgrace” and “a dereliction of duty”. (See 9

about 8 hours ago
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Badenoch accused of ‘interfering’ in lobbying scandal linked to Cameron

Lex Greensill has accused Kemi Badenoch of “interfering” in an insolvency case “for political ends” as the last Conservative government sought to protect David Cameron from scrutiny for his involvement in a lobbying scandal.The financier, whose companies paid Cameron millions of pounds, claimed that the current Tory leader used her former ministerial position as business secretary to restructure an inquiry into his activities.Greensill alleged that the move was made to protect Cameron as he was elevated to the House of Lords in November 2023 and brought back into government as the foreign secretary.The allegations were made in a letter sent to the current business secretary, Peter Kyle, as Greensill contests the possibility of being disqualified from company directorships for up to 15 years.Greensill claimed the decision to omit Cameron’s involvement from the Insolvency Services’s inquiries meant the case against him should be dropped because it was “based on allegations that have no merit and little or no evidence”

about 8 hours ago
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Labour MPs revive ‘desperately needed’ soft left group to take on Reform

Senior MPs who were the architects of the Labour welfare rebellion are to revive a powerful caucus on the party’s soft left to influence the budget and beyond, in a move likely to further unnerve No 10.The former cabinet minister Louise Haigh and Vicky Foxcroft, a former whip who resigned to vote against welfare cuts, are to take the reins of the Tribune group with the aim of giving an organising voice to their wing of the party.Key figures in the group, which hopes it will attract more than 100 MPs to revitalise the caucus, were major players in Lucy Powell’s successful deputy leadership campaign.They also include the former minister Justin Madders, Sarah Owen, the chair of the women and equalities committee and Debbie Abrahams, the chair of the work and pensions select committee. Two other new MPs will also steward the group – Yuan Yang and Beccy Cooper

about 11 hours ago
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Lancashire’s Reform-run council plans to close care homes and day centres

Lancashire’s Reform-run council has been accused of “selling off the family silver” through its plans to save £4m a year by closing five council-run care homes and five day centres and moving residents into the private sector.One of the care home residents, a 92-year-old woman, said she would leave only by “being forcibly removed or in a box”.Another resident’s son, a Reform party member, said any move would “kill” his mother, and he vowed to quit the party if the closures went ahead.Questions are also being asked about a potential conflict of interest involving Reform’s cabinet member for social care in Lancashire, who owns a private care company with his wife.Reform UK took control of Lancashire county council (LCC) from the Conservatives in May, winning 53 of the 84 available seats

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Reform’s public-sector pensions plan could cost billions extra, union warns

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London mayor sees parallels in Zohran Mamdani’s victory: ‘Hope won’

Sadiq Khan, the city’s first Muslim mayor, says: ‘We are united by something far more fundamental, our belief in the power of politics to change people’s lives for the better’While the soon-to-be first Muslim mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani, was in the final throes of his mayoral campaign on a brisk day in New York, Sadiq Khan, the first Muslim of mayor of London, was wrapping up a two-day climate summit in a steamy if overcast Rio de Janeiro.“Hope is not gone,” Khan told the 300 city mayors gathered in the Brazilian city’s museum of modern art.The London mayor was referring to the challenges faced by regional politicians in dealing with the climate emergency in the face of the scepticism or outright denial of the science by national governments – including that led by Donald Trump.But on hearing of Mamdani’s win, Khan suggested that this too had given him hope. London and its mayor have been repeatedly raised by figures such as Trump’s former chief of staff Steve Bannon as the disastrous outcome that New Yorkers had to avoid

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