Labour in call for ‘access’ inquiry
LABOUR has called for the parliamentary sleaze watchdog to investigate whether a Tory donor who helped pay for the refurbishment of Boris Johnson’s Downing Street flat was able to get privileged access to ministers in return.
WhatsApp messages show the Prime Minister indicated he would consider a Great Exhibition 2.0 project backed by Lord Brownlow, who was setting up a charitable trust which was supposed to take over maintenance of the flat over No 11.
It is the latest in a series of calls for inquiries which Mr Johnson and the Tories have faced since he took office in 2019.
In May 2021, Mr Johnson asked his adviser on ministerial interests, Lord Geidt, to investigate claims he had secretly asked Tory donors to foot the £112,000 bill for the lavish revamp which far exceeded the official £30,000 allowance.
Lord Geidt concluded there had been no breach of the ministerial code, although he said the Prime Minister should have been more rigorous in checking the financial arrangements.
He said when Mr Johnson had finally learned the bill had been settled by the Conservative Party - including with a donation from Lord Brownlow - he reimbursed them out of his own pocket.
However a further investigation by the Electoral Commission resulted in the party being fined £17,800 for failing to properly declare a £67,000 donation from a firm controlled by Lord Brownlow.
It also revealed the PM had exchanged WhatsApp messages with Lord Brownlow in November 2020 which were not disclosed to Lord Geidt when he conducted his inquiry.
Those messages, released this week, show that in the same exchanges, Mr Johnson referred to Lord Brownlow’s proposed Great Exhibition 2.0.
Less than two months later, the peer secured a meeting with then Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden to discuss the idea.
Downing Street said the proposal was never taken forward but Labour wants the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Kathryn Stone, to investigate if there was any conflict of interest.
The Prime Minister has also faced repeated questions over his relationship with the American businesswoman during his time as London mayor.
Ms Arcuri, who has claimed to have had a four-year affair with Mr Johnson, received public grants for her technology business and had access to three trade missions which he led during his time in City Hall.
Mr Johnson avoided a criminal investigation after the Independent Office for Police Conduct found no evidence it was as a result of his influence, although it said it would have been wise for him to have declared their close association as a conflict of interest.
The Greater London Authority’s oversight committee is now investigating.
Mr Johnson has denied any wrongdoing.