Nigel Farage launching new website to help people
denied accounts by banks
The ex-Ukip leader has been hailed as a consumer
champion after vowing to create a guide on how to flood banks with data
requests
Michael
Savage and Anna Isaac
Sun 30 Jul
2023 06.00 BST
Nigel
Farage has vowed to help thousands of people flood big banks with demands for
details about why they were denied an account, as allies said his treatment by
Coutts and NatWest had turned him into Britain’s newest “consumer champion”.
The former
Ukip leader is to spearhead a website assisting anyone who wants to find out
why they have been denied a bank account. Farage used a subject access request
to discover that, despite initial denials by Coutts, his political views had
played a part in the closure of his account.
Farage is
said to want to make the independent website a non-partisan tool designed to
help those who believe they have been denied banking services because of their
political views. It will provide them with a step-by-step guide to demanding
the personal information a bank holds about them.
While NatWest,
which owns Coutts, is said to have faced hundreds rather than thousands, of
similar requests so far, Farage and his supporters believe the new website will
help those daunted by the process of questioning their bank.
“This is
cross-party, it is non-partisan,” said an ally. “Dare I say, how the liberal
elite – for want of a better term – have managed to turn Nigel Farage into one
of the country’s leading consumer champions, I have no idea.”
There has
already been a huge fallout from Farage’s case. Dame Alison Rose, the chief
executive of NatWest Group, eventually stood down in the wake of the row after
she revealed she had been the source of a BBC story claiming Farage’s account
had been closed for commercial reasons.
She was
soon followed out of the door by Peter Flavel, chief executive of Coutts.
Farage also wants NatWest Group’s chairman, Howard Davies, to stand aside.
While
Downing Street made clear that Rose could not stay in her post, the government
appears to be more protective of Davies. Andrew Griffith, the City minister,
said on Friday night that it would not be “helpful” for the NatWest Group’s
chairman to quit.
However,
Davies is already unpopular with some on the Tory right. He unleashed a
stinging criticism of Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng’s disastrous mini-budget in
front of hundreds of his staff last year. He explained how he felt
“embarrassed” in its aftermath while attending a conference for the
International Monetary Fund, the Washington-based lender of last resort.
“I was at
the IMF conference while all this was going on and Kwarteng was there. It was
embarrassing, because he was then summoned back home to be sacked … The
perception of the UK was terrible,” Davies told hundreds of staff at the
private event held for the group’s legal, governance and regulatory affairs
division in early November 2022.
Davies has
been caught up in the backlash from Farage’s case because of his initial
support for Rose. Both Rose and the bank’s board had hoped she would survive
with a mea culpa and docked pay for talking to the BBC’s business editor, Simon
Jack, about Farage’s relationship with Coutts.
Davies, as
chair, had taken soundings from the Treasury at several points last Tuesday
after the BBC issued apologies to Farage over its story, which had cited a
source at Coutts. He hoped that a statement from himself and Rose would be
enough to calm shareholders and get through to the banking group’s half-yearly
financial results being released on Friday.
In fact, it
only held for a few hours. He was informed that ministers were unhappy about
the statement, and that Rose had to go. With UK taxpayers still owning 39% of
the banking group, it was regarded as an instruction, not a request. By 1.32am
on Wednesday morning, Rose was gone.
While Rose
admitted to speaking to Jack, an independent investigation led by the law firm
Travers Smith will examine what was said and when. It is part of a wider
review. It will look into how Farage’s accounts at Coutts were closed, why they
were shut down and how such a controversial set of statements about his
political views and actions was compiled.
The review
is also set to find out if Farage is an outlier or a sign of a wider issue at
Coutts, checking all accounts closed at the private bank over the past 24
months. It will follow a similar approach as the Farage-specific investigation,
looking at questions of how, why and what was said to all other customers whose
accounts were shut down.
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