Glasgow Times

Lobbying row deepens as minister rubbishes reform

- BY TOM TORRANCE

THERE are already “some quite robust systems” in place on lobbying, a senior minister has argued in the wake of the Greensill Capital controvers­y.

A series of probes have been commission­ed, including by Downing Street, as Westminste­r looks to understand the role former prime minister David Cameron, right, played in securing Whitehall access for Greensill.

The company was selected as an intermedia­ry lender for some Government Covid-19 support loans at the start of the pandemic, and its collapse now risks thousands of jobs, particular­ly in the steel sector.

The saga deepened last week after it emerged the former head of government procuremen­t, Bill Crothers, took a part-time position with the failed firm while still in his Whitehall post.

But while Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice said there might be “tweaks” required following the review into Greensill by No 10, the Cabinet Secretary and parliament­ary committees, he argued the system is already “pretty good”.

Eustice, who also defended Cameron’s actions, told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show: “What I am saying is that we have already got some quite robust systems in place and the principle one is the ministeria­l code – it is about how ministers conduct themselves based on the people they have talked to.

“So, we should be worried less about who they have talked to, worried much more about ‘are they unduly influenced by individual­s?’

“And that is why they declare meetings they have, that is why they declare financial interests, it is why they declare any other potential interests of family members – and that does happen and we all do that.”

But Labour accused Government of failing to the extent of the understand the controvers­y if ministers thought only “tweaks” were required to the current rules. Shadow chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Rachel Reeves said: “Having failed to deflect the blame, the Government’s latest approach appears to be to shrug their shoulders and say, ‘Scandal? What scandal?’. “We don’t need the ‘tweaks’ Eustice said they might consider today, we need to tackle Tory sleaze with a full, independen­t, transparen­t inquiry – and we need stronger measures to put integrity and honour back into heart of Government.”

Meanwhile, the LibDems joined Labour in urging for reform of transparen­cy rules, with leader Sir Ed Davey calling it “wrong” that the Prime Minister is “judge and jury” in deciding if the ministeria­l code has been breached.

The controvers­y over the relationsh­ip between Government and the private sector follows disclosure­s that Cameron personally lobbied Chancellor Rishi Sunak on Greensill’s behalf and was able to arrange for its founder, Lex Greensill, to have a “private drink” with Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

Cameron has admitted to pressing the Treasury for Government support for Greensill before its collapse but he “didn’t get anything for it”, Eustice said.

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