The Scotsman

Attempt to halt Brexit ‘power grab’

- By SCOTT MACNAB

Scottish Labour’s deputy leader, Lesley Laird, has tabled proposals in an attempt to break deadlock over a Brexit “power grab” on the Scottish Parliament.

She said Labour was the only party trying to stop the UK heading towards “constituti­onal crisis”.

Meanwhile, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon wrote to Commons Speaker John Bercow asking for a vote on Holyrood’s refusal to grant legislativ­e consent for the UK’S EU Withdrawal Bill.

Millionair­e Brexit backer Arron Banks is facing calls to explain his links with the Kremlin following reports that his contacts were far more extensive than previously acknowledg­ed.

The Leave.eu founder, who helped bankroll Nigel Farage’s campaign, held a series of undisclose­d meetings with Russian embassy officials around the time of the 2016 referendum campaign, according to the Sunday Times.

The paper said it had seen emails showing he also discussed a potential business deal involving six Russian gold mines with ambassador Alexander Yakovenko after being introduced to him by a

suspected Russian spy. The head of the parliament­ary inquiry into “fake news”, Conservati­ve MP Damian Collins, said the report raised serious questions about Russian interferen­ce in UK politics.

“The question I think people will want answered is did Mr Banks profit out of these meetings?” he told BBC1’S Sunday Politics programme.

“Did that happen? Did he make money out of it and did he use that money to fund his campaigns?

“Russia has a track record of interferin­g in the politics of other countries. It does it in a variety of ways. That is why it is important we understand the level of contact and involvemen­t there was here.”

Mr Collins confirmed that Mr Banks has agreed to give evidence to the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee as planned tomorrow, having previously announced he was pulling out, accusing the MPS of conducting a “witch hunt”.

Emails from Mr Banks and Leave.eu communicat­ions chief Andy Wigmore reportedly showed they had repeated contacts with Russian officials to discuss matters of mutual interest throughout the EU referendum campaign and its aftermath.

They reportedly showed Mr Banks met Mr Yakovenko three times – having previously only acknowledg­ed one encounter in 2015 – and made a visit to Moscow in February 2016 in the midst of the referendum campaign.

The paper said he and Mr Wigmore also had lunch with the ambassador in November 2016, three days after they and Mr Farage had met Donald Trump in New York following his victory in the US presidenti­al election.

They were said to have been introduced to Mr Yakovenko by Alexander Udod – one of 23 suspected Russian intelligen­ce officers subsequent­ly ejected from the UK after the poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury. The ambassador was said to have proposed a business deal that would have involved them in the consolidat­ion into one company of six Russian gold mines.

The emails were passed to the Sunday Times by journalist Isabel Oakeshott, Mr Banks’s ghostwrite­r on The Bad Boys Of Brexit, who is writing a book with Tory peer Lord Ashcroft on Russia’s use of “hybrid warfare” to influence British politics.

The paper said she came forward after she said her email accounts were hacked.

But Mr Banks said: “I had two boozy lunches with the Russian ambassador and another cup of tea with him. Bite me. It’s a convenient political witch-hunt, both over Brexit and Trump.”

 ??  ?? Former Labour prime minister Gordon Brown, left, speaking to Andrew Marr on the BBC1 current affairs programme The Andrew Marr Show yesterday when he said there was potentiall­y the chance of a change of prime minister
Former Labour prime minister Gordon Brown, left, speaking to Andrew Marr on the BBC1 current affairs programme The Andrew Marr Show yesterday when he said there was potentiall­y the chance of a change of prime minister
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 ??  ?? 0 Aaron Banks will appear in front of MPS tomorrow
0 Aaron Banks will appear in front of MPS tomorrow

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