The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Money trail of Putin’s pals

- Alex Bell

Russia interfered with the UK’s democratic process but quite how, to what effect and who benefited is of no interest to the British state. It is an astonishin­g conclusion from the House of Commons Intelligen­ce and Security Committee’s report into Russian influence over UK politics.

If a person tampered with a ballot box at a polling booth, they’d be jailed. If a political party was shown to have acted illegally in an election, there would be prison sentences and fines. But if a foreign state becomes active in our democracy, it is ignored.

It suggests that Russian influence is substantia­l, and very successful. Enough to get the British Government to look the other way. Which brings us back to the question – who benefits?

The report says lots of people did in upper echelons of business and society – “a wide sphere of the British establishm­ent”. It adds that “PR firms, charities, political interests, academia and cultural institutio­ns were all willing beneficiar­ies of Russian money”.

It appears that this generosity was a PR job, designed to obscure the real benefit Russians found in the city of London, which the report says was used as a “laundromat” to clean up funds for criminals and corrupt Russian officials.

Which, in turn, suggests the real beneficiar­ies were Britain’s banks and hedge funds. Put another way, the very people who run, and contribute to, the Conservati­ve Party.

Boris Johnson appeared to block the report. It’s not unreasonab­le to assume that his desired appointmen­t of Chris Grayling as head of the intelligen­ce and security committee might have been a further step in keeping the document from view. But Grayling failed.

Now we have a shadow of a document. No more than shadow, because it has been redacted to the point of becoming only a sign that a document was here, but is not to be properly seen. That must be accepted as part of the security protocol, but it doesn’t help to clear things up.

Johnson has shot down the suggestion of a proper inquiry into the Brexit vote. Which could be taken as further evidence that British politician­s have no interest in rummaging in affairs which might damage them.

Johnson is not one for putting democratic probity before selfadvant­age. To his good fortune, British governance has less accountabi­lity than the American one. When claims were made of Russian influence in the US presidenti­al election of 2016, Congress investigat­ed.

Robert Mueller’s report was inconclusi­ve, but the investigat­or did unearth several key American political players who seemed to have an inordinate interest in visiting Moscow. That’s two reports, from two democratic states (Britain and the US) which says there is a clear trend of American and British conservati­ves seeking out Moscow’s favour.

It smacks of conspiracy theory – but both Mueller and the Commons committee can’t be fantasists.

You can take the p*** out of the tale of Trump in a Russian hotel enjoying golden favours from a prostitute, or question why Dominic Cummings spent so many years working in Russia, and not get very far. The only fact is that a peculiar relationsh­ip exists.

That, in itself, demands further investigat­ion. The electorate of Britain must know if their leaders are in cahoots with a state enemy. The implicatio­n is that they are the

“Electorate of Britain must know if their leaders are in cahoots with a state enemy

beneficiar­ies of this strange affair. That Johnson, and Trump, reached some Faustian pact with Putin.

Nor, regrettabl­y, does the whiff of something rotten come only from America and England. In a bizarre admission, Alex Salmond chose the run-up to the 2014 referendum to announce he admired Putin’s strong leadership. This had no connection to the messaging or strategy of the campaign. You might write this off as a casual remark by a tired politician, were it not for the fact that Salmond then turned up as a presenter on Russian TV. The Intelligen­ce and Security Committee report make it clear that the station is a propaganda outlet for Moscow.

It says there is a “buffer of Westerners who become de facto Russian state agents”. When asked if Salmond was a de facto agent, the committee’s spokesman, MP Stewart Hosie, said it was not their job to name names.

So, whose job is it to reveal the names of people in British politics who might be ‘agents’ or, at least, corrupting influences on democracy? If Westminste­r won’t do it, Holyrood should.

Edinburgh doesn’t have powers over intelligen­ce, but it does on questions of law. It is within its remit to hold an inquiry into whether any member of the parliament has broken electoral law by not declaring an interest relating to a foreign government.

There should be cross-party agreement on this, as surely nobody wants the integrity of our democracy undermined. That inquiry would take the Westminste­r report as its foundation, and investigat­e the probity of our electoral system with a view to outside influence.

We might then begin to get some answers about who benefited, and how, from the scandal that threatens to destroy trust in our democracy, our government and our leaders.

 ??  ?? Power play: Britain’s Boris Johnson speaks with Russian president Vladimir Putin during internatio­nal talks in Berlin in January.
Power play: Britain’s Boris Johnson speaks with Russian president Vladimir Putin during internatio­nal talks in Berlin in January.
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