The Mail on Sunday

NOW CAMERON FACES PROBE INTO £700m CHINA DEAL

- By Emma Dunkley

A FINANCE company backed by Lex Greensill negotiated a lucrative contract with Transport for London while Boris Johnson was Mayor and the businessma­n was working as an advisor in No 10.

The fresh revelation about Government contracts linked to Mr Greensill and his collapsed loans firm last night prompted renewed calls for a fuller investigat­ion into the Australian financier’s access to Whitehall and how he was able to benefit from his ties to David Cameron and other senior figures.

The Mail on Sunday can reveal that the process for awarding the contract – potentiall­y worth millions of pounds – began in December 2015 when Mr Cameron was Prime Minister and Mr Johnson was Mayor of London, a position that governs TfL.

Mr Greensill later appointed Mr Cameron as a paid adviser, awarding him share options reportedly worth more than £40 million.

Government documents show that TfL handed a supplier payment contract to the US firm Taulia, which was financed solely by Greensill Capital at the time.

It meant Greensill would get a fee for paying suppliers early.

However, the contract was never used and terminated in 2019 after only one supplier signed up. It is understood a £150,000 fee was still paid to Taulia.

Last night, Dame Margaret Hodge, former chair woman of the Public Accounts Committee, said: ‘Greensill’s relationsh­ip with the public sector is murky and open to lots of questions.

‘This is why the relationsh­ip between the company and politician­s, civil servants, and the public sector should be subject to a thorough, total and complete investigat­ion.’

A spokesman for TfL said: ‘In December 2015, when the previous Mayor was in office, TfL ran a competitiv­e tender for a supplier to provide an early payments solution, which would allow its global supply chain to be paid earlier, with an affordable rate of finance. No Government Ministers or officials were involved in the procuremen­t, the selection of supplier or the award of the contract.

‘The previous Mayor did not have any role in this procuremen­t.’

Mr Johnson last week announced an inquiry into the Government’s use of supply chain finance connected to Greensill. The National Audit Office is also probing Greensill Capital’s involvemen­t in the Government’s pandemic loan scheme, including how it was accredited to take part.

Greensill Capital and Taulia declined to comment. The Cabinet Office said that the contract was ‘done entirely by TfL’.

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