Daily Mail

It’s a kangaroo court!

Fury of Vote Leave as they are fined for overspendi­ng by £600k (although Remain got £9m for pro-EU leaflets)

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

THE Electoral Commission was accused of running a politicall­y- motivated ‘ kangaroo court’ yesterday after it found the official Brexit campaign had broken electoral law during the referendum.

Vote Leave was fined tens of thousands and senior figures reported to the police over allegation­s it breached strict spending limits.

But the campaign reacted with fury, claiming the commission had based its findings on ‘unfounded claims and conspiracy theories’. There were also claims of bias. Brexiteers have repeatedly accused the commission of focusing on allegation­s of wrongdoing by the Leave side, while finding that David Cameron’s decision to spend £9.3million of taxpayers’ money on a leaflet sent to all households setting out the case for Remain was within the referendum rules.

The allegation­s centre on how Vote Leave gave £ 675,000 to BeLeave, founded by 22-year-old fashion student Darren Grimes, to spend on Facebook adverts in the final days of the referendum campaign. It handed over the cash as it came within £200,000 of the £7million spending limit.

Campaigns were allowed to donate excess funds to other groups, but only if there was no instructio­ns on how the cash should be spent.

The commission yesterday said there was ‘substantia­l evidence’ that Vote Leave – which has been fined £61,000 – and BeLeave had been working to a ‘common plan’. Mr Grimes was fined £20,000 and referred to the Metropolit­an Police along with Vote Leave official David Halsall.

Vote Leave said the commission’s report contained ‘a number of false accusation­s and incorrect assertions that are wholly inaccurate and do not stand up to scrutiny’.

A spokesman said: ‘It is astonishin­g that nobody from Vote Leave has been interviewe­d by the commission in the production of this report, nor indeed at any point in the past two years, despite Vote Leave repeatedly making it clear they are willing to do so.

‘Yet the commission has interover

‘Motivated by a political agenda’

viewed the so-called “whistleblo­wers”, who have no knowledge of how Vote Leave operated and whose credibilit­y has been seriously called into question.

‘All this suggests that the supposedly impartial commission is motivated by a political agenda rather than uncovering the facts. The commission has failed to follow due process, and in doing so has based its conclusion­s on unfounded claims and conspiracy theories.’

The spokesman added that Vote Leave was confident that the findings would be overturned. Dominic Cummings, who was campaign director, said he was ‘looking forward to this idiocy being properly dealt with finally in open court, where the Electoral Commission’s kangaroo court antics will be exposed’.

The commission cleared Vote Leave of breaking spending limits in March last year but re-opened its investigat­ion after ‘new evidence’ came to light. It said it made five attempts to interview Vote Leave the course of three months and accused it of ‘resisting our investigat­ion from the start’.

In a statement posted on Twitter, Mr Grimes said he had been fined £20,000 for ‘ticking the wrong box’ on an applicatio­n form.

He said: ‘Politician­s say they want young people to engage with politics. I was 22 when I got involved in a referendum I felt passionate­ly about. I did nothing wrong. I have been persecuted by powerful people for nothing more than engaging in the democratic process and having the temerity to be on the winning side.’

ARE they proud of themselves, those 12 Tory Remainiacs who came so close to bringing down the Government last night in their efforts to destroy Britain’s hand in the Brexit talks? Do Stephen Hammond and Nicky Morgan think they behaved honourably in reneging on a promise to back the Prime Minister, while leaving Opposition rebels to rescue the country from a disaster for democracy?

The truth is that if it hadn’t been for those five Labour heroes – Frank Field, John Mann, Kelvin Hopkins, Kate Hoey and Graham Stringer – Theresa May’s red-line pledge to withdraw from the customs union would have been eradicated, with her authority reduced to ruins.

Indeed, the likelihood is the country and Tory Party would have been plunged into a bitterly divisive confidence vote and perhaps a leadership election, when all MPs’ energies should be focused on securing the best Brexit deal for the UK.

With no obvious candidate to unite the warring factions, the door might well have been opened to the nightmare of a government led by Jeremy Corbyn.

Is that what the dirty dozen Tory rebels wanted, when they sought to bind ministers to remaining in the customs union if no agreement on frictionle­ss trade could be reached before January 21?

Are they so besotted by the monstrous, sclerotic, statist EU behemoth that they were prepared to risk throwing our country on the mercy of a half-baked Marxist and his economical­ly illiterate henchman, shadow Chancellor John McDonnell?

One thing is certain. If last night’s treacherou­s amendment to the Trade Bill had passed, Jean-Claude Juncker and his cronies would be laughing their socks off, knowing they just had to wait until January for their dreams of keeping us locked in the customs union to come true.

What is so frustratin­g is that while MPs fight like rats in a sack over baffling subclauses in the Brexit legislatio­n, the rest of us just get on with our lives, confident that whatever Brexit may bring, Britain will cope just fine.

For proof, look no further than yesterday’s astonishin­g jobs figures. Yet again, they break all records for the numbers in work, while showing unemployme­nt at an historic low, wages growing and job vacancies at their highest ever. Truly, Britain is working.

Would hard-nosed employers be so keen to expand their staff, if they seriously feared Brexit would mean the ‘calamity’ predicted by swivel-eyed Remoaners?

Indeed, this paper finds it hard to recall when there was quite such a yawning divide between the defeatist political elite and the real world they’re supposed to represent.

The Mail prays that when Westminste­r’s summer madness subsides, politician­s will remember the people they are paid to serve. As for those 12 Tories who might have brought the Government down, they must answer to their conscience­s, their local parties – and ultimately to the 17.4million Leave voters they betrayed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom