Daily Mail

Will storm over tax return sink Andrea’s No 10 bid?

- By Jack Doyle, Larisa Brown and James Slack j.doyle@dailymail.co.uk

ANDREA Leadsom faced a growing row last night for refusing to release her tax return unless chosen as one of the final two MPs in the Conservati­ve Party leadership shortlist.

The Energy Minister and former City banker yesterday agreed to publish her details when interviewe­d on the BBC’s Andrew Marr show.

But within hours her campaign said that she would do so only if chosen from the five leadership candidates to go to a final vote of Tory Party members.

Last night pressure grew on Mrs Leadsom to release the informatio­n immediatel­y, after Justice Secretary Michael Gove released two years of his returns. They showed his only earnings were from his MP and ministeria­l salaries.

Home Secretary Theresa May is expected to release her returns imminently, and Work and Pensions Secretary Stephen Crabb within days.

Liam Fox, the final leadership candidate, is also refusing to publish his unless he is among the final two candidates. The row threatens to overshadow the formal launch of Mrs Leadsom’s campaign this morning. There will be particular interest in her return because in 2014 it emerged she set up a trust to hold shares in her buy-to-let property firm, in an arrangemen­t which could help reduce inheritanc­e tax. There is no suggestion she acted unlawfully.

Yesterday a spokesman said she would publish her return after the end of the MP selection process – expected to conclude next week – but ‘before the end of the campaign in the country’, meaning that it could be weeks before documents are released.

That would mean MPs would not be able to see her tax return before they decide whether she should be one of two shortliste­d contenders to be Tory leader and prime minister.

The row could puncture the momentum around her campaign, which saw her move to be the second favourite, behind Mrs May, over the weekend.

When asked by Andrew Marr whether she would publish her return, she appeared surprised. Initially she said that she would ‘have to think about it’, before conceding that she would.

But later, her spokesman then clarified she would do so only ‘if she’s in the final two’. He said she did not want to put other MPs in a ‘difficult position’.

In 2014 it emerged that Mrs Leadsom had set up a trust to hold shares in her buy-to-let company for her and her husband Ben’s children.

The firm was created in 2003 to invest in more than £1 million of properties in Oxford and Surrey.

In 2005, 24 per cent of the shares in the company, called Bandal, were transferre­d into trusts for the benefit of her three children.

This is not illegal, but can potentiall­y reduce inheritanc­e tax liability. In 2004 the firm raised loans from a company based in Jersey, a tax haven.

Mrs Leadsom resigned her directorsh­ip of Bandal in 2014, shortly before she was appointed as a Treasury minister, and was replaced by her son.

When the arrangemen­ts were first reported, Mrs Leadsom’s spokesman said it was a ‘normal corporate situation and all tax that is due is being paid’.

Yesterday Mrs Leadsom also refused to rule out having Ukip leader Nigel Farage on her Brexit deal team.

She has been endorsed by Arron Banks, the millionair­e Ukip backer who funded the Leave.EU campaign group. Yesterday there were claims Ukip members in Essex were ringing Tory MPs pretending to be members of the public, urging them to back Mrs Leadsom.

Mr Gove’s returns showed that in 201314 he earned £117,786 as an MP and education secretary, and paid £40,493 in tax. The following year his earnings dropped to £96,071 when he was demoted to chief whip. That year he paid tax of £27,929.

A spokesman said: ‘Michael accepts that candidates for the job of prime minister should be transparen­t about their income and tax affairs.’

Liam Fox’s campaign also said they would not publish his return unless he makes the final two.

According to the latest register of financial interests, he received £20,000 from National Australia Bank for attending and speaking at a conference in Sydney for two days in January, and several thousands more in other speaking and writing fees.

‘Have to think about it’

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