The Guardian (USA)

Lewis Hamilton: FIA head Mohammed Ben Sulayem has never had my backing

- Giles Richards

Lewis Hamilton has delivered a damning assessment of the leader of Formula One’s governing body, stating he has never had confidence in Mohammed Ben Sulayem and lambasting the FIA and F1 for a lack of accountabi­lity.

Speaking before this weekend’s Australian Grand Prix, Hamilton criticised the sport’s male-dominated culture and praised Susie Wolff, the managing director of the all-female series the F1 Academy, for standing up for herself in filing a criminal complaint against the governing body over its handling of an investigat­ion into a potential conflict of interest.

Wolff and her husband, the Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, were investigat­ed in December 2023 after an allegation that confidenti­al informatio­n was passed between an employee of the sport’s owners Formula One Management (FOM) and a team member. The F1 Academy, which Wolff runs, is owned and run by FOM.

The Wolffs denied the allegation­s and within two days the FIA adjudged neither party had a case to answer with no explanatio­n of the rationale behind their investigat­ion, its findings or how it reached its conclusion­s.

In Melbourne, after Wolff had made public that she had filed a complaint in early March, Hamilton was asked if Ben

Sulayem, who has been president since December 2021, was the right person to be in charge of the FIA and if he enjoyed the British driver’s backing. His answer was unequivoca­l.

“He never has,” Hamilton stated bluntly. The seven-time world champion continued, expressing his disenchant­ment with how the sport was dealing with what it deems are internal issues and warned it was damaging the reputation of F1.

“There is a real lack of accountabi­lity here, within this sport, within the FIA,” he said. “There are things that are happening behind closed doors, there is no transparen­cy, there is really no accountabi­lity and we need that. The fans need that. How can you trust the sport and what is happening here if you don’t have that?”

When Susie Wolff was investigat­ed last year she condemned it as causing huge reputation­al damage to her and her husband describing it as “insulting” and rooted “in intimidato­ry and misogynist­ic behaviour”. She made clear her intent to defend herself robustly.

“I’m incredibly proud of Susie,” Hamilton added. “I think she is so brave, and she stands for such great values. She’s such a leader and in a world where often people are silenced, for her to be standing up sends such a great message.

“So, hopefully this stand that she’s taking now will create change, will have a positive impact, and especially for women. It is still a male-dominated sport, and we’re living in a time where the message is if you file a complaint, you will be fired, and that is a terrible narrative to be projecting to the world, especially when we’re talking about inclusivit­y here in the sport. We need to make sure we stay true to the core values.”

The sport has been the subject of intense scrutiny in it deals with complaints, allegation­s and grievances, over question marks in transparen­cy and process, which have been impossible to ignore in recent weeks.

On Wednesday Ben Sulayem was cleared after an investigat­ion by the FIA’s own ethics committee into allegation­s made by a whistleblo­wer that he had interfered in the result of the 2023 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix and the homologati­on of the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix last year. No details of the allegation­s were released however, nor of the evidence presented to refute the claims.

For two months the Red Bull team principal, Christian Horner, has been embroiled in a controvers­y over allegation­s of inappropri­ate behaviour made against him by a female employee. The grievances were dismissed by an independen­t investigat­ion launched by Red Bull’s parent company and the employee in question has since been suspended by Red

Bull Racing. Once more no details of the reason for the suspension, the inquiry, its evidence or its conclusion­s and how they were reached have been made public.

Wolff’s decision to launch a criminal complaint has ratcheted up the scrutiny on the FIA even further. The governing body will now have to account for its actions against the Wolffs publicly in a court in France, to explain who initiated the investigat­ion, where the complaint originated and why.

At the time it appeared to have been instigated by a single unsubstant­iated media report, insufficie­nt alone to justify any inquiry, while all the other nine F1 teams made a unanimous statement in support stating they had not made any complaints against the Wolffs.

The FIA has yet to make any comment on Hamilton’s comments or Wolff’s legal action.

 ?? Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters ?? Susie Wolff has filed a criminal complaint against the FIA over unsubstant­iated allegation­s made against her and her husband, Mercedes principal Toto Wolff. Photograph:
Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters Susie Wolff has filed a criminal complaint against the FIA over unsubstant­iated allegation­s made against her and her husband, Mercedes principal Toto Wolff. Photograph:
 ?? Photograph: Robert Cianflone/Getty Images ?? Lewis Hamilton has said F1 fans need transparen­cy and accountabi­lity if they are to ‘trust the sport’.
Photograph: Robert Cianflone/Getty Images Lewis Hamilton has said F1 fans need transparen­cy and accountabi­lity if they are to ‘trust the sport’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States