The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Gove allies accused of stoking storm over Cameron’s lobbying

- By Glen Owen and Brendan Carlin

DAVID CAMERON’S embarrassm­ent over lobbying Ministers for a private finance firm has been stoked by aides of Michael Gove, the former Prime Minister’s allies claimed yesterday.

They also suspect former top civil servants Bob Kerslake and Nick Macpherson of having played a part in revelation­s over Mr Cameron’s interventi­on on behalf of Greensill Capital.

Mr Cameron has suffered mounting scrutiny over his efforts to get the company access to Covid loans – efforts which involved lobbying Chancellor Rishi Sunak and two other Treasury Ministers.

As Prime Minister, Mr Cameron brought Lex Greensill, the Australian who ran the company, into No10 as an unpaid adviser on supply chain finance and went to work for his firm after leaving office.

Greensill Capital has now filed for insolvency. Mr Sunak faced claims yesterday his officials tried to redesign one of the pandemic support schemes to accommodat­e the firm.

It also emerged Mr Cameron had lobbied a fourth Minister, taking Mr Greensill to a ‘private drink’ with Health Secretary Matt Hancock in October 2019 to discuss an NHS payment system. The Sunday Times also claimed the former PM emailed Boris Johnson’s senior special adviser last year to say that the Treasury was ‘nuts’ to exclude Mr Greensill’s company from a Covid loan scheme.

Allies of Mr Cameron – cleared of breaking lobbying rules – claim he has been caught in a ‘pincer movement’ between No10 aides loyal to Mr Gove and former mandarins Lord Macpherson and Lord Kerslake, now crossbench peers.

They are suspicious about the roles played by Simone Finn, Downing Street’s Deputy Chief of Staff, and Henry Newman, senior adviser, who both worked for Francis Maude when Paymaster General in the Cameron government, before joining Mr Gove’s leadership campaign.

Baroness Finn was also romantical­ly involved with Mr Gove after they left Oxford University.

It had been reported that a proposal from Mr Greensill, while he worked in No 10, for NHS-affiliated pharmacies to be paid using private finance was ‘handed directly to Mr Cameron, who signed it off... bypassing Francis Maude entirely’.

One of the Cameron friends said: ‘It has been noted how Maude has come out of all this smelling of roses. It has also helped to put Rishi back in his box a bit, and distracted from stories about the cost of renovation­s to Downing Street.’

Both ex-civil servants dismissed the allegation­s, while a No 10 source also categorica­lly denied Ms Finn and Mr Newman were involved.

Lord Kerslake was head of the Civil Service during Mr Cameron’s premiershi­p, and when Mr Greensill joined the No 10 team in 2012.

Cameron allies suspect Lord Kerslake fed informatio­n over the affair to the media after he stepped down in 2014.

Senior sources also suggest Lord Macpherson, Treasury permanent secretary under Mr Cameron, could have briefed against him.

Lord Macpherson has denied the claims, saying: ‘I have never met Greensill and never saw anything relating to him while at HM Treasury.’ He also insisted he had ‘never had access to inside informatio­n or documents relating to Greensill’.

Lord Kerslake dismissed any suggestion he had briefed against Mr Cameron as ‘complete nonsense’.

Allies of Mr Hancock insisted he had behaved entirely correctly and informed officials of the meeting.

Sources close to the ex-PM said last night Mr Cameron himself was not casting blame on anyone.

Scottish taxpayers have also become embroiled in the saga.

The Scottish Government could have to pay up to £32 million a year for 25 years as part of a guarantee to an Inverness-shire smelter owned by GFG Alliance. Greensill was the main lender to GFG.

 ??  ?? ‘BRIEFED AGAINST’: Mr Cameron
‘BRIEFED AGAINST’: Mr Cameron

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