The Guardian

‘It’s not a good look’ Some Tory MPs uneasy over line of personal attack

- Pippa Crerar Political editor

One of the most senior politician­s in the Labour party is facing persistent questions about her personal affairs. The police are investigat­ing after pressure from a Tory MP, despite initially saying there was no case to answer. The story has been relentless­ly pursued by the rightwing press.

If the playbook sounds familiar, that’s because the Conservati­ve MP pulling the strings behind the Angela Rayner living arrangemen­ts saga is the same one who consistent­ly led the charge over the “beergate” controvers­y involving Keir Starmer.

Back then, Richard Holden was an ambitious Tory backbenche­r, representi­ng the seat of North West Durham, who spotted an opportunit­y to cause some trouble for the Labour leader and deflect attention from Boris Johnson after the Partygate scandal erupted.

As a result of that operation – which ended with Starmer being cleared by police – Holden’s reputation within the Tory party as a tenacious attack dog grew until Rishi Sunak appointed him chairman in November 2023.

This time, his team’s target is Rayner. The strategy is similar – look for an opportunit­y to land a blow and then repeatedly punch the wound, drawing out the pain for as long as possible by drawing in the authoritie­s, even if she’s ultimately found to have done nothing wrong.

The allegation­s over Rayner’s living arrangemen­ts in the 2010s and the sale of her former council house in Stockport first surfaced in mid-February in an unauthoris­ed biography, Red Queen, by the billionair­e Tory peer Lord Ashcroft, which was serialised in the Mail on Sunday and pushed hard by Holden’s CCHQ operation.

The paper’s story, the first of 79 on the subject over the following two months, accused Rayner of hypocrisy after the book revealed she made a £48,500 profit on her ex-council house thanks to the right-to-buy policy.

The attack line gained little traction, so the Tories moved on to allegation­s that Rayner may have lied about the location of her primary residence to avoid paying capital gains tax on the sale.

They demanded answers from her after she insisted she had lived primarily in her own home, while former neighbours had said she was living a mile away with her husband.

James Daly, the Tory MP for Bury North and Holden’s deputy at Conservati­ve headquarte­rs, first asked Greater Manchester police (GMP) to investigat­e whether she had given false informatio­n or had broken electoral rules in March. They found no evidence that any offence had been committed.

An emotional Rayner pleaded for privacy as she told reporters that there was “never a question of deceitfuln­ess” or “conspiracy” over her living arrangemen­ts, but that she had a “difficult” family situation at the time.

One Labour insider said:

“There’s an old-fashioned sense about what life is like but actually there’s lots of Britons that do live in blended families these days. People do recognise that ordinary people’s lives aren’t all like the Waltons.”

On the day of Labour’s local election campaign launch on 28 March, Rayner said that she would not publish the “personal tax advice” she received on the sale of her house – unless her Tory critics did the same.

Later that day, Starmer said he had “absolute confidence” in his deputy, although he admitted that he had not personally seen the tax advice. Shortly after, the police announced that following a complaint, they would reassess their decision not to investigat­e.

Rayner, according to her aides, is entirely confident she has done nothing wrong, which is why she has pledged to step down as deputy leader if she is found to have committed a crime.

Stephen Watson, the chief constable of GMP, told BBC local radio on Tuesday that Rayner was under investigat­ion on a number of counts. But he added: “That is a neutral act. It does not imply that the informatio­n gives us any hard and fast sort of evidence upon which to base anything at this stage. It is simply: we have an allegation, we are going to get to the bottom of what has happened.”

The force has not publicly said what it is investigat­ing, although reports suggest that a team of at least a dozen officers will examine tax matters and potential election law offences arising from Rayner’s electoral roll registrati­on.

One Tory HQ insider admits that it’s “puzzling”, as HMRC usually investigat­es tax offences while prosecutio­ns under election law must be made within 12 months of an alleged offence. Even Daly, who initially contacted the police, has struggled to say what he thinks Rayner has done wrong. “I asked the police to investigat­e certain matters that were in the public domain regarding … certain things,” he said during an cringewort­hy Sky News interview.

Rayner’s allies are confident she will be cleared, suggesting that her legal and financial documents – which could include utility bills, payslips and bank account details – would clearly show that her own home was her primary residence.

Not all Tory MPs are convinced by the strategy, and several are understood to have approached Rayner in recent days to share their discomfort. “It’s not a good look,” one asked. “Do we really want to get into this territory?”

Holden’s team is unapologet­ic. “It wasn’t ‘a case of ‘let’s go for Angela Rayner’; the Ashcroft book just presented an opportunit­y,” said one insider. “It struck us right from the start that if we pulled at one thread then potentiall­y others would come loose.”

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: JAMES MANNING/PA ?? ▲ Angela Rayner is entirely confident she has done nothing wrong, according to her aides
PHOTOGRAPH: JAMES MANNING/PA ▲ Angela Rayner is entirely confident she has done nothing wrong, according to her aides
 ?? ?? ▲ Richard Holden, a Durham MP, is chairman of the Conservati­ve party
▲ Richard Holden, a Durham MP, is chairman of the Conservati­ve party
 ?? ?? Holden is the Tory MP who pursued Keir Starmer for the ‘beergate’ lockdown controvers­y and is now taking Rayner to task over her living arrangemen­ts
Holden is the Tory MP who pursued Keir Starmer for the ‘beergate’ lockdown controvers­y and is now taking Rayner to task over her living arrangemen­ts

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