The Guardian (USA)

Boris Johnson accepts another £10,000 in accommodat­ion from Tory donor

- Rowena Mason Whitehall editor

Boris Johnson has accepted another £10,000 of accommodat­ion from the Bamford family, taking their contributi­ons to his lifestyle to almost £50,000 since he resigned as Conservati­ve leader.

The former prime minister registered the additional gift from Lady Carole Bamford, for “concession­ary use of accommodat­ion for me and my family in October”.

She had previously contribute­d £10,000 for the Johnson family’s accommodat­ion in September, plus an additional £3,500 for different accommodat­ion that month.

Johnson accepted the gifts despite part-owning three other homes, in Oxfordshir­e, London and Somerset. The Bamford family also contribute­d more than £23,800 towards the Johnsons’ wedding celebratio­ns over the summer.

In July, Bamford hosted Boris and Carrie Johnson as they celebrated their wedding, which had taken place during lockdown, in the grounds of his 18thcentur­y mansion, Daylesford House in the Cotswolds.

Johnson had abandoned plans, after his resignatio­n as prime minister, to hold the celebratio­n at the PM’s official country residence, Chequers, in Buckingham­shire. The “festival-esque” celebratio­n is said to have included a steel band, rum punch, Abba songs and a conga.

Lord Anthony Bamford, a proBrexit Conservati­ve peer who is chair of JCB, the constructi­on equipment manufactur­er, has been a generous Tory donor for decades. The billionair­e entreprene­ur supported Johnson’s successful leadership bid in 2019, and has given more than £10m in donations and gifts to the party since 2001.

Johnson has begun making his own money on the side after leaving office, with a £130,000 speech to the Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers in

Colorado, during which he joked about sharing the French president, Emmanuel Macron’s “fancy” wine with Angela Merkel, the former German chancellor. He is also due to give a speech at a cryptocurr­ency conference in December.

The latest register of MPs’ interests data, published this week, shows Liz Truss declaring £16,500-worth of transport during her leadership campaign from a company called Big Ben Films, after previously taking £8,000 from Bamford. She was given more than £500,000 in total for her campaign that led to her short-lived time as prime minister.

It also reveals that Sajid Javid, the former chancellor, has establishe­d a company as a vehicle for his income, saying its revenue would be used to “pay employees, maintain my ongoing involvemen­t in public life and support my charitable work”, as well as paying him £20,000 a month for speaking engagement­s.

The company received £36,000 from Javid’s former employer, Deutsche Bank, for a speech to its clients in October.

 ?? ?? Boris Johnson and Lord Bamford, the JCB chair, visiting a JCB factory in India in April. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images
Boris Johnson and Lord Bamford, the JCB chair, visiting a JCB factory in India in April. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

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