The Mail on Sunday

CAMILLA Cavendish recently gave an impassione­d defence of MPs’ extra earnings in her Financial Times column, which conspicuou­sly does not use her full title – Baroness Cavendish of Little Venice.

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After leaving journalism for a brief stint in David Cameron’s Downing Street policy unit, Cavendish was awarded a seat in the Lords five years ago. Commenting last week on the latest sleaze scandal to hit the Tories, she said she would ‘rather be represente­d by someone capable of commanding a high salary outside [Parliament], like Geoffrey Cox’ than presumably someone who spends their time fully focused on the well-paid job they were elected to do.

Little Venice’s curious comment drew me to her own entry in the House of Lords’ Register of Interests, where I can reveal she has been late to declare her own penchant for filthy lucre earned from advising and entertaini­ng the corporate finance world. Her gigs include work for St James’s Place, the financial advisers forced to overhaul widely excessive pay and perks after a string of exposes by Cavendish’s former employer, The Sunday Times.

Little Venice is currently a paid adviser on social care to the Department of Health, while also acting in the same capacity to a venture capital fund specialisi­ng in healthcare and speaking at a social care conference organised by a healthcare data firm.

She also raked in fees from a speech to Later Life Lending, a provider of equity-release mortgages, often touted as a solution for people who need to draw money for their spiralling care costs. She declared that eight months after the event.

‘Politics needs talent,’ writes Cavendish. It also needs parliament­arians who can follow basic rules. Seven of Little Venice’s recently added interests were registered months after they took place – which leaves her repeatedly in breach of the Code of Conduct requiring registrati­on within one month.

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