The Scottish Mail on Sunday

POLICE CALLED IN OVER LABOUR GRANDEE

After Commons probe Geoffrey Robinson’s expenses...

- By Glen Owen and Mark Hookham

A FORMER Labour Minister who The Mail on Sunday outed as an alleged Communist spy has been referred to police over a suspected ‘irregulari­ty’ in Commons payments.

Geoffrey Robinson now faces questions over the £30,000-a-year taxpayer-funded salary paid to a long-term friend for working in his constituen­cy office at the age of 89.

This newspaper has discovered evidence that Mr Robinson, who was Paymaster General under Tony Blair, told Commons authoritie­s

Brenda Price was working virtually full-time for him just two months before he disclosed that she was so frail that she required round-the-clock nursing care.

Mr Robinson had also been granted power of attorney over Ms Price while she was still receiving her salary – potentiall­y giving him control over her finances.

After seeing our dossier, Commons watchdogs alerted police. Parliament­ary authoritie­s suspect that they may have continued to pay the salary – on Mr Robinson’s authority – after doctors concluded Ms Price was losing her mental faculties, a senior Commons source told this newspaper.

The Labour grandee also charged the Commons nearly £1,000 a month for renting a room from her, even after she needed 24-hour care. Mr Robinson, who stood down at the Election after 43 years as a Labour MP, declined to comment last night.

The police involvemen­t comes just months after this newspaper unearthed intelligen­ce files which identified Mr Robinson as a spy who allegedly handed defence secrets to Communist Czechoslov­akia during the Cold War. Mr Robinson described the allegation­s as ‘a complete fabricatio­n’.

Now emails leaked to The Mail on Sunday reveal that Mr Robinson told the Independen­t Parliament­ary Standards Authority (Ipsa) that Ms Price was working for him 30 hours a week as his ‘constituen­cy financial officer’ in Covthat entry North West. She had worked for him since 1997, but this submission came in January 2018 – three months after she had granted Mr Robinson power of attorney over her.

The process gives authority to control someone’s financial affairs if they go on to lose the mental capacity to do so themselves. Ipsa, the official body which governs MPs’ salaries, staffing costs and expenses, expects to be informed if staff are no longer fit to work.

Sources estimate Ms Price was paid about £30,000 a year.

This newspaper has also establishe­d that Mr Robinson claimed a total of £43,060 from the Commons in rent for a room in Ms Price’s home. He billed £960 a month rental costs from May 2015 until February of this year, £15,380 of which came after he drew up the power of attorney. Ms Price had apparently needed 24-hour nursing care since at least March 2018

She died at her £600,000 detached home in Balsall Common, near Solihull, last month at the age of 90.

Mr Robinson was with her when she passed away, and paid tribute to her at her funeral, which was attended by former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and former Labour Cabinet Minister Ed Balls.

The Commons source said: ‘After looking at The Mail on Sunday’s evidence, and examining their own records – which contained no notificati­on that Ms Price was unwell – Ipsa decided that the prima facie evidence of wrongdoing was so potentiall­y serious that it could not be handled internally and should be referred to the police. Ipsa officials have met with Scotland Yard.’

The Metropolit­an Police last night confirmed: ‘Ipsa made a referral to the Met in relation to possible expense claim irregulari­ties in relation to an individual. This is currently being assessed.’

Mr Robinson’s former constituen­cy came within 208 votes of falling into Tory hands in this month’s Election, with Taiwo Owatemi narrowly retaining the seat for Labour.

Earlier this year, this newspaper revealed claims that Mr Robinson passed a trove of confidenti­al informatio­n to a Communist spy at the height of the Cold War. Intelligen­ce files state that Czech secret police chiefs judged Robinson – apparently codenamed Karko – was one of the agency’s ‘most productive sources’ in Britain at the time.

He is said to have provided at least 81 pieces of intelligen­ce over three years, including a series of handwritte­n documents concerning Government policy on subjects such as estimated military spending cuts. This newspaper was able to compare the notes in the files with a letter and samples of the MP’s handwritin­g

Mr Robinson has strenuousl­y denied the claims.

Ms Price and Mr Robinson are longstandi­ng

‘Evidence was so serious they had to go to police’

friends who shared a love for Coventry City Football Club and, when he stood down as a director in 1997, because he had been appointed as a Government Minister, she was elected in his place.

Ms Price was also on the board of the New Statesman, a Left-wing magazine owned by Mr Robinson, in the late 1990s.

Neighbours and friends of Ms Price said that, while Mr Robinson regularly visited his friend in Balsall Common, a prosperous commuter village near his constituen­cy, they did not think that he regularly stayed overnight at the property he was claiming rent for.

The rental agreement states that he was provided with a bedroom, bathroom and study in her house, plus shared use of a sitting room, dining room, conservato­ry and kitchen.

One friend said: ‘She was ill on and off for the last year, but for the last few months she was really ill. She died at home and Geoffrey was with her.’ The friend said Mr Robinson used to stay regularly when he was on constituen­cy business, but appeared to stop staying overnight ‘a few years back’.

A neighbour said: ‘He would be here most weekends quite a while ago when he would have his surgeries. You would see the Jaguar arriving most Thursdays and he would stay.

His car would stay most of the weekend. It was happening until four or five years ago or even longer. After that, he would still visit [but only during the day].’

Another neighbour said he would arrive in his Jaguar and visit for short periods but she did not think he stayed overnight because his car would not be there the next day. ‘I don’t think he ever did stay there,’ she said. Ipsa rules do not state how many nights a month MPs should stay overnight in constituen­cy homes which they claim rent for. MPs are, however, instructed to ‘have regard to value for money when making claims’.

In his tribute to Ms Price at her funeral, Mr Robinson said: ‘During

Brenda’s final years she was very fortunate to find a wonderful companion and carer... every one of the team came to love Brenda in the closing stages of her wonderful life and all felt blessed to know her.’

Ms Price was also an investor in a private sixth-form college in Coventry that Mr Robinson co-founded in 2015. The National Mathematic­s and Science College, which charges fees of £29,500 a year, has posted a series of hefty financial losses since it opened, including a £1.7million loss in 2018.

The mission of the college, which has received at least £3.4 million of funding from Chinese investors, is to place pupils on to science, engineerin­g and maths courses in top universiti­es. An email sent by Mr Robinson in November 2016 blamed the losses in that financial year on a shortfall in students.

It said a £1 million ‘stand-by facility’ was being created, of which UK investors would put up £330,000.

He explained that ‘Brenda has proposed that she will provide the security for this by way of a mortgage on her property till September 2019’. It is unclear whether her home was remortgage­d to support the college.

This is not the first time that Mr Robinson has been in trouble with the Parliament­ary authoritie­s.

In October 2001 he was suspended from the Commons for three weeks over his 1990 invoice asking for £200,000 from notorious tycoon Robert Maxwell, which Mr Robinson had failed to register in his list of parliament­ary interests.

The MP complained that the official report into the matter had condemned him as ‘a liar’ who had ‘evaded tax, deliberate­ly misled parliament and deliberate­ly misled his closest and trusted colleagues’.

 ??  ?? talking to Gordon Brown’s former spokesman Charlie Whelan, while bottom right is Sarah Schaefer, who would become David Miliband’s special adviser
SHARED PASSION: Former Attorney General Geoffrey Robinson attends a Coventry City Premier League match with Brenda Price in 2000. He is pictured
talking to Gordon Brown’s former spokesman Charlie Whelan, while bottom right is Sarah Schaefer, who would become David Miliband’s special adviser SHARED PASSION: Former Attorney General Geoffrey Robinson attends a Coventry City Premier League match with Brenda Price in 2000. He is pictured
 ??  ?? FILES: How we revealed Cold War claims that Robinson fiercely denies
FILES: How we revealed Cold War claims that Robinson fiercely denies
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? LODGINGS: Ms Price’s West Midlands home, where Robinson was claiming rent for overnight stays
LODGINGS: Ms Price’s West Midlands home, where Robinson was claiming rent for overnight stays
 ??  ?? POWER TRIP: Gordon Brown with Mr Robinson in 2017
POWER TRIP: Gordon Brown with Mr Robinson in 2017

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