The Gazette

Politician­s trade blows as Government blocks release of Teesworks correspond­ence

- By EMILY CRAIGIE emily.craigie@reachplc.com

POLITICIAN­S traded blows before the government blocked the release of documents linked to the Teesworks investigat­ion.

Labour attempted to force the government to release all correspond­ence detailing why the National Audit Office (NAO) was not chosen to lead the inquiry into the UK’s largest freeport.

However, the move was voted down 272 votes to 166 – not a single Conservati­ve voted to reveal the documents.

During the debate in Parliament, Labour Stockton North MP Alex Cunningham called for an “end to secrecy”, while Conservati­ve Middlesbro­ugh South and East Cleveland MP Simon Clarke accused Labour of a “cynical, shameless and seedy attempt to talk down Teesside”.

The investigat­ion was announced after concerns were raised about governance at the freeport.

Labour Middlesbro­ugh MP Andy McDonald has claimed there is “industrial-scale corruption”, however, a government spokespers­on said they had not seen any evidence of corruption, wrongdoing or illegality.

On Wednesday, shortly before the debate started, the government named the panel that would be conducting an investigat­ion into Teesworks.

The chief executive of Lancashire County Council Angie Ridgwell has been appointed as the lead reviewer. She was previously a director general at the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. Ms Ridgwell will be supported by Quentin Baker, who is a qualified solicitor and the director of law and governance at Hertfordsh­ire County Council, and Richard Paver, who was the first treasurer of the Greater Manchester Combined Authority.

Last month, Mr Gove stated he would be selecting a panel for the review despite the NAO saying it was “willing and able” to carry out the investigat­ion.

This led Labour to question the independen­ce of the probe, with Shadow Levelling Up Secretary Lisa Nandy questionin­g how a review could be viewed as fair when the panel was “hand-picked” by the government.

In response, the party, as part of its opposition day debate – where it gets to choose the topic debated in Parliament – tabled a vote to demand the government release all of the correspond­ence linked to its decision not to allow the NAO to investigat­e.

During the Teesworks debate, politician­s traded blows over the freeport.

Ms Nandy said Labour wanted to know why the government had blocked an NAO investigat­ion which would help get to the bottom of the use of public funds “in the wake of some of the most serious allegation­s I have ever seen in my time in Parliament”.

Speaking after the debate, she said: “Tory MPs have voted to cover up why the government made the astonishin­g decision to

Shadow Levelling Up Secretary Lisa Nandy block a fully independen­t investigat­ion into the serious allegation­s that have been made, and instead chose to hand-pick the terms for their own review.”

In response to Ms Nandy in the House of Commons, Local Government Minister Lee Rowley said the panel will have “independen­t experts” and will look at matters “in-depth.” He added that the “facts will be establishe­d”.

Mr Rowley said Labour had made a “strange choice” deciding to hold a “three-hour debate about the process by which a decision was made to have a review which is led by one group of people instead of another group of people”.

Mr Rowley also added that the review was being set up similarly to previous investigat­ions.

Conservati­ve Hartlepool MP Jill Mortimer, who sits on the Public Accounts Committee, said she could understand why the NAO was not chosen to lead the investigat­ion, and increasing its jurisdicti­on could set a “regrettabl­e precedent.”

Mr Clarke stated there had been no “credible suggestion that wrongdoing has occurred” at Teesworks and that the process undertaken by Mr Gove to set up the probe was “normal and straightfo­rward”.

Mr Clarke said: “It’s not just public confidence but it is investor confidence that is being undermined by the party opposite [Labour].”

He went on to add: “This is a cynical, shameless and seedy attempt to talk down Teesside, to imply wrongdoing and to damage the interests of the very deprived communitie­s I am very proud to represent.”

However, Mr

Cunningham

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