£400 a week ‘wage’ for eco rent-a-mob
EXPOSED: The Extinction Rebellion files showing climate change zealots are being PAID to bring mayhem to our streets
claim The maximum living for volunteer a expenses is £400 (or £200 for week volunteering someone more part-time). No should be claimed volunteer than a needs to cover living expenses. basic
EXTINCTION Rebellion is paying activists up to £400 a week to lead the protests that have brought chaos to the streets of Britain, documents seen by The Mail on Sunday reveal.
Protesters have received payments totalling more than £70,000 in four months alone. But the ecoprotest group privately fears it could face a six-figure tax bill if the money, which is given as expenses, is deemed to be payment for work done on XR’s behalf.
Last night, one Tory MP called on HMRC to launch an immediate investigation into its tax affairs.
Most of the thousands of activists who brought chaos to London last week were unpaid volunteers, but a select number are claiming cash. This newspaper has seen claims for expenses from 168 activists, including Tamsin Omond, a baronet’s granddaughter who has appeared in Tatler and rubbed shoulders with Boris Johnson – and who asked for money after ditching some PR clients to concentrate on protests.
Files from within XR reveal its finances. They show how:
Activists have been paid more than £200,000 since the start of the scheme;
The cost of the payments is increasing by ‘at least £40,000 a month’;
Activists are targeting ‘high net worth individuals’ for more funds;
They spent £5,000 on a camping tour of Europe for key members.
The revelations come as the number of activists arrested in the current XR protests nears 1,300.
A document titled Finance Policy And Processes seen by this newspaper in a ‘work in progress’ version says: ‘The maximum claim for volunteer living expenses is £400 a week (or £200 for someone volunteering part-time). No more should be claimed than a volunteer needs to cover basic living expenses.’
The document states that claims ‘may cover a maximum period of four weeks’, but adds: ‘Further applications may be made to cover additional periods of time.’
Tamsin Omond claimed a total of £1,340 for November and December last year. Educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge, the granddaughter of Dorset baronet Sir Thomas Lees is an actor who also works in public relations, and chooses to use gender-neutral pronouns, including Mx in place of Ms or Mr.
Mx Omond’s expenses claim was based on being out of pocket after giving up some clients to spend more time campaigning.
Mx Omond offered to give up commercial work altogether to focus more on XR, but asked for
at least £800 a month to cover housing, food and transport in that case. But XR’s documents raise concerns about the fact it has paid no tax or National Insurance on expenses and questioned the employment status of activists.
A document dated August 13, 2019 addresses the fear that HMRC is likely to ‘crawl all over us’ and that in ‘the worst case scenario’ the sum payable, including fines, is ‘probably £150,000 to £200,000’.
Plans have been drawn up to remind volunteers that they are responsible for their own tax affairs. It is not yet clear whether XR have contacted HMRC or if the taxman has moved to recover any tax that may be due from XR.
Tory MP David Davies said: ‘It is utterly outrageous if Extinction Rebellion is not paying its fair share of tax.
‘These self-appointed, holierthan-thou guardians of the planet may think they are somehow above the law but they are not.
‘What’s needed now is a root-andbranch investigation of how this organisation operates, starting with an immediate inquiry into its tax affairs.
‘I shall be writing to HMRC tomorrow to demand nothing less.’
Compassionate Revolution, the registered company used for XR activity, has £371,000 in the bank. XR’s fundraising has raised more than £2.5million in the past year.
XR said: ‘We have sought professional advice on financial support and expenses to volunteers. That advice is that in most cases no tax is payable and, where it is, those of us who receive financial support or expenses will be advised to declare income in our tax returns.’