Daily Mail

Forget Sir Beer Korma... now he’s Sir Beer Boring!

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

SIR Keir Starmer has been forced to beg his frontbench­ers to stop briefing the Press that he is boring.

The Labour leader told his Shadow Cabinet in response: ‘What’s boring is being in opposition.’

He urged them to focus on attacking the Government, saying it was ‘boring’ to undermine Labour’s project of getting back into power.

According to The Guardian, several people then echoed their leader’s calls for unity and discretion, in a lengthy exchange described by one shadow frontbench­er as ‘ironically very boring’.

It follows a poll which found that ‘ boring’ was the most common word volunteere­d by the public to describe the Labour leader. It came as he was facing calls for an investigat­ion into why he failed to declare which ‘ mystery’ donors paid him more than £25,000 for legal work before he became Labour leader.

A Tory MP has written to the Parliament­ary Commission­er for Standards to urge her to investigat­e further ‘potential breaches’ of the code.

Alexander Stafford asked why Sir Keir registered the receipt of £17,598.60 for ‘legal advice given before 2020’– without saying who paid for it. It followed two previous declaratio­ns of £ 2,399.58 and £5,936 in December 2020. Mr Stafford, MP for Rother Valley, said the payments declared in the register of members’ financial interests failed to ‘disclose the source of this money, or indeed the ultimate client’. He claimed this was a breach of the rules. It comes after Kathryn Stone, the Parliament­ary Standards Commission­er, announced she is investigat­ing Sir Keir over multiple fail

‘Used by public to describe him’

ures to register gifts from football teams and book royalties on time.

The Labour leader is also awaiting a verdict from Durham Police on whether he broke lockdown rules last year in the so- called ‘Beergate’ scandal – which saw him dubbed him ‘Sir Beer Korma’. It makes him the first Leader of the Opposition to face simultaneo­us investigat­ions by the police and the Parliament­ary Commission­er for Standards.

Sir Keir has earned thousands for legal advice since he became an MP, but stopped doing so when he became Labour leader in April 2020.

The Tories have accused him of not being open about all the funding he has received, making a mockery of the system which is meant to allow the public to know whether any payments are above board. Mr Stafford’s letter said: ‘Clearly Mr Starmer’s entry in the register is incomplete as it is impossible to determine what influence the payment he has received might have on his actions and words as a Member of Parliament.’

Sir Keir’s office said last year the donors were not named due to ‘client confidenti­ality’ and said the arrangemen­t had been agreed with the registrar of members’ interests.

 ?? ?? Despair: Sir Keir Starmer
Despair: Sir Keir Starmer

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom