David Cameron said to have made about $10m from
Greensill Capital
BBC Panorama says it has obtained documents showing
ex-PM received sum partly from cashing in shares
David Cameron was cleared of breaking lobbying rules
in a government-commissioned report.
Aubrey
Allegretti Political correspondent
@breeallegretti
Mon 9 Aug
2021 20.21 BST
David
Cameron made about $10m (£7m) from Greensill Capital before the finance firm he
lobbied on behalf of collapsed, according to the BBC.
Panorama
said it had obtained documents showing the former prime minister received the
sum from cashing in shares he held in the company worth $4.5m (about £3.3m) in
2019, in addition to an annual salary of $1m (£720,000).
His
spokesperson said he did not “receive anything like the figures quoted” and
insisted what he was paid was a “private matter”.
It is the
first time a number has been put on how much Cameron made, after he told a
government-commissioned inquiry set up to investigate his dealings with senior
politicians and Whitehall officials that he was paid “a good amount of money”.
The review,
chaired by Nigel Boardman, cleared him of breaking any rules but said Cameron
“understated” the nature of his relationship with Lex Greensill when pressing
for the Australian financier’s company to get the largest possible allocation
of government-backed loans under the Covid corporate financing facility.
Panorama
said it had seen papers showing Cameron had accepted the terms of his payment
by Greensill, with a $700,000 (£504,000) bonus to top up his salary paid out in
2019 – taking the total amount he made to $10m for two-and-a-half years’
part-time work.
Cameron’s
spokesperson said he “acted in good faith at all times” and there was “no
wrongdoing in any of the actions he took”, adding he had “no idea” until
December 2020 that Greensill was in danger of failing.
They said
he lobbied the government “not just because he thought it would benefit the
company, but because he sincerely believed there would be a material benefit
for UK businesses at a challenging time”.
The
spokesperson added Panorama’s report tried to “define a role for Cameron at
Greensill that is totally at odds with the facts” and that he was a part-time
adviser to the company with no executive or board responsibilities.
Labour’s
deputy leader, Angela Rayner, said the sum Cameron reportedly received was
“utterly ludicrous”. Referencing Boardman’s finding that current lobbying rules
“work well”, Rayner said the payments Cameron received showed the regulation in
place on former ministers’ work was “completely unfit for purpose”.
She said:
“It’s created a wild west where the Conservatives think it’s one rule for them
and another for everyone else. The system causes more harm than good by giving
a veil of legitimacy to the rampant cronyism, sleaze and dodgy lobbying that is
polluting our democracy under Boris Johnson and the Conservatives.”
Labour
would ban former prime ministers from ever taking on lobbying jobs once they
leave office and create an integrity and ethics commission to “stamp out
sleaze”, Rayner added.
Cameron’s
dealings with Greensill first came under scrutiny earlier this year, when he
was revealed to have directly lobbied senior Whitehall officials and the
chancellor, Rishi Sunak.
Greensill
collapsed earlier this year, but before it did Cameron sent emails and texts to
high-ranking politicians and civil servants and also took Lex Greensill to a
“private drink” with Matt Hancock, the health secretary.
So embedded
was Lex Greensill in the government, he had even been given a No 10 business
card calling him a “senior adviser” during Cameron’s tenure in Downing Street.
The
government’s chief commercial officer, Bill Crothers, began working as an
adviser to Greensill Capital in 2015 – while still employed in the civil
service. Remarkably, he was given official approval to do this.
In the
Boardman review published last month, Greensill was found to have been given
“extraordinarily privileged” access to Downing Street. But the finger of blame
was partly pointed at the late cabinet secretary, Jeremy Heywood.
But critics
said Boardman should not have been in charge of the inquiry because of his
close relationship with the government and the Conservative party. He had been
a non-executive director at the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy and was a former Tory party candidate.
In April,
Cameron accepted that he should have communicated with the government “through
only the most formal of channels” rather than text messages to Sunak.
When the
final report was published that found Cameron “did not breach the current
lobbying rules and his actions were not unlawful”, the former Tory leader said:
“I have said all along that there are lessons to be learned, and I agree on the
need for more formal lines of communication.”
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