Yorkshire Post

Hunt referred to standards watchdog over flats purchase

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HEALTH SECRETARY Jeremy Hunt is to be referred to the parliament­ary standards watchdog over his failure to properly declare his involvemen­t in the purchase of a series of luxury flats.

Mr Hunt has apologised following the disclosure that he failed to declare a business interest with both Companies House and the parliament­ary register of MPs’ interests.

He said the omissions were the results of “honest administra­tive mistakes” and that he did not gain financiall­y as a result.

However Labour said his actions represente­d a “serious breach” and that they would be referring him to the Parliament­ary Commission­er for Standards.

Shadow Cabinet Office Minister Jon Trickett, who is Labour MP for Hemsworth, said yesterday: “This is simply unacceptab­le and especially so given the Secretary of State’s position at the heart of Theresa May’s Government.

“Labour will today refer Jeremy Hunt to the standards commission­er to look into this serious breach. He should have had the decency to refer himself rather than sweep this under the carpet.” The move came after The Daily

Telegraph reported that Mr Hunt failed to notify Companies House of his 50 per cent interest in Mare Pond Properties Limited, something which took him six months to rectify.

He also did not inform the parliament­ary register of members’ interests of his share in the business within the 28-day time limit, according to the paper.

It is claimed Mr Hunt set up the company with his wife Lucia Guo to buy seven properties in the Ocean Village developmen­t in Southampto­n on February 7.

A spokeswoma­n for Mr Hunt said: “These were honest administra­tive mistakes which have already been rectified.

“Jeremy’s accountant made an error in the Companies House filing, which was a genuine oversight. With respect to ministeria­l and parliament­ary declaratio­ns, the Cabinet Office are clear that there has been no breach of the ministeria­l code.

“Jeremy declared the interest to them after the company was set up. They advised that as it was a shell company with no assets or value, it should only be registered when it became operationa­l.

“As such, Jeremy presumed the same rules applied to parliament­ary declaratio­ns.”

The revelation comes as Mr Hunt is in Tokyo, Japan, where he is set to attend the Patient Safety global ministeria­l conference.

Honest administra­tive mistakes which have already been rectified. A spokeswoma­n for Jeremy Hunt on his failure to declare a business interest.

 ??  ?? JEREMY HUNT: To be referred to the standards commission­er over ‘serious breach’ of MPs’ code.
JEREMY HUNT: To be referred to the standards commission­er over ‘serious breach’ of MPs’ code.

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