The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

The Brits who won’t Brexit

Some British business leaders seeking citizenshi­p in Cyprus

- CLARE BALDWIN

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson won a thumping election victory last week on a campaign to "get Brexit done," but not before some wealthy donors to his Conservati­ve Party quietly took steps to stay inside the European Union.

Cyprus government documents seen by Reuters show that Conservati­ve Party donors have sought citizenshi­p on the island, an EU member state, since Britain voted to leave the bloc in 2016.

They include billionair­e Alan Howard, one of Britain's bestknown hedge fund managers, and Jeremy Isaacs, the former head of Lehman Brothers for Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Cyprus' interior ministry recommende­d that both men's applicatio­ns be approved, the government documents show.

The Conservati­ve Party won another term in office last week after an election campaign that was dominated by Brexit. Johnson called the election to try to gain a majority in Parliament to push through his plan to take Britain out of the EU early next year.

That some Brits who made a career out of assessing risk have applied for second passports may suggest sagging confidence in Britain's economy after it leaves the EU. A broker who makes his living handling such passports says he's seen a surge of enquiries from Brits looking for ways to keep their European Union citizenshi­p.

"Brexit is the only factor driving this," says Paul Williams, chief executive of passport brokerage La Vida Golden Visas. The right to live, work, study or set up business anywhere in Europe, says Williams, "that all changes with Brexit."

According to Britain's Electoral Commission, Howard donated at least £129,000 to the Conservati­ve Party personally and through his company between 2005 and 2009. Isaacs made personal and corporate donations of at least £626,500 to the party, £50,000 of it earmarked for The In Campaign, a group lobbying to remain in the EU.

The Cyprus government documents show that Howard, and Isaacs and his wife all sought Cypriot citizenshi­p in 2018. A spokespers­on for Howard declined to comment. Isaacs did not respond to requests for comment. His assistant said he was traveling and unavailabl­e. The

Conservati­ve Party didn't respond to requests for comment.

Britain voted narrowly to leave the European Union in 2016 but the details of the country's future relationsh­ip with the bloc are still unclear. Economists have said Britain will be economical­ly poorer under every form of Brexit, compared with staying in the EU.

Cypriot citizenshi­p costs a minimum of 2 million euros of which at least 500,000 euros must be permanentl­y invested. At no point in the applicatio­n process is the applicant compelled to live in — or even visit — Cyprus. Cyprus is popular with people seeking a second passport because the entire investment can be in real estate, and it has low taxes.

The Cyprus government documents reviewed by Reuters also list a man named David John Rowland as having sought citizenshi­p. The documents that name Rowland contain scant details, showing only that he applied for a Cypriot passport as part of an investor group. Separate Cypriot company records list a U.K. national David John Rowland as a director of a company called Abledge Ltd, which was registered on Dec. 31, 2015. These records show Rowland's home address to be on the British

tax haven island of Guernsey — the home of the David John Rowland who is a Conservati­ve Party donor, former Party treasurer, property developer and financial adviser to Prince Andrew. Reuters couldn't determine Abledge Ltd's line of business or any other informatio­n about the firm.

A spokespers­on for a bank owned by Rowland, Banque Havilland, declined to comment. Repeated requests through another of Rowland's businesses and his personal email address went unanswered. A spokespers­on for the palace declined to comment. The Cypriot government declined to comment about any of the individual­s named in this story or on the status of a government review of its passports-for-sale scheme, citing EU privacy rules.

Electoral Commission records show that Rowland has donated at least £6.5 million to the Conservati­ves since 2001, £854,500 of it since the Brexit vote.

Prime Minister David Cameron named him Tory treasurer and chief Conservati­ve fundraiser after the millions of pounds he donated to the 2010 general election campaign — to protect Britain's "liberty" and economic future, Rowland told media at the time. He quit before officially taking up the post.

Isaacs was once seen as a successor to Dick Fuld, but ended up leaving Lehman shortly before the global financial crisis. In 2015, he became a Commander of the Order of the British Empire at the Queen's birthday honors.

Howard made billions on the 2008 financial crisis by predicting interest rate and currency moves, and profited again on the Brexit vote by accurately tracking voter sentiment, media reported.

When an emergency U.K. budget raised taxes on the wealthy in 2010, Howard moved to Switzerlan­d. He has since returned to Britain. But last year the master of hedging hedged his bets against holding only British citizenshi­p.

Another British financier who sought Cypriot citizenshi­p is James Brockleban­k, a managing partner at private equity firm Advent Internatio­nal. In 2016, he said that even if Brexit were ultimately a good thing, it would create "significan­t challenges" and cause the U.K. to lose out on investment. He applied for Cypriot citizenshi­p in 2018. A spokespers­on for Brockleban­k declined to comment.

 ?? JESSICA TAYLOR ?? Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a lawmakers meeting to elect a speaker, in London, Britain on Dec. 17.
JESSICA TAYLOR Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a lawmakers meeting to elect a speaker, in London, Britain on Dec. 17.

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