This morning the Chancellor is desperately trying to avoid taking responsibility for giving Greensill access to at least £400 m of government-backed loans.
He's claiming it's nothing to do with him or the Treasury.

Of course, that hasn't always been his view. A thread...
2. It was the Chancellor who announced the new government-backed loans - the Coronavirus Large Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CLBILS).
gov.uk/government/new…
3. When civil servants sought a ministerial direction on CLBILS, they were clear who was behind all this. assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
4. As was the minister who gave that direction assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
5. It was the Chancellor who was keen to announce that he was taking action
6. And to announce the details of the new CLBILS scheme
7. And when the government reports on CLBILS on its own website, it's very clear which department is publishing the data.

You guessed - it's the Treasury.
gov.uk/government/col…
8. This morning however, his team were clear: "the scheme is not led by the Treasury but rather the department for business, energy and industrial strategy."
9. His schemes, his launch, his headlines.

But where is he today?

Nowhere to be seen. Missing in action. Passing the buck. Dodging responsibility.
Update at 13:10 - there are even more of these.

Who exactly does the Chancellor think he's kidding?...
11. The Treasury described it as "our loan scheme for larger companies":
12. Rishi Sunak even posted a promotional video about the design of the scheme:
13. Rishi Sunak was very keen to take questions on CLBILS last year - on Twitter:
14. We have plenty of questions for the Chancellor. If the answers are so simple, let's hear them - and from him.

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More from @bphillipsonMP

8 Apr
The Greensill story is complex and confusing.

But the Chancellor’s text messages released tonight make it very simple - a little thread:
2. This is about Rishi Sunak intervening to try to put hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayer money in the hands of an unregulated lending firm with links to a former Conservative PM.
3. First, some background: As PM, David Cameron opened the doors of government to Greensill Capital, owned by his friend Lex Greensill. When he left No 10, Cameron became an 'advisor' to the bank. In that role, he lobbied his former Tory colleagues.
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On the argument that most of our rights at work come from the struggle of unions & Labour here in Britain, not from Europe - I half agree and half disagree: a short thread (1/9)
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