If you also include 3 of the ‘Big 4’ consultancies who are on the Office of the Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists (Deloitte, KPMG and PwC are on the list but deny they’re lobbyists) at least £11.6bn worth of UK government contracts have been won.
In total, 401 gov contracts have been won by 53 lobbying groups (minus the ‘Big 4’) since the register began in March 2015.
Some firms joined the register after 2015, but we included all gov contracts won in the last 7 yrs, as there was a time-lag for some companies to register.
The top 5 gov contract winning companies - DLA Piper UK, Pinsent Masons, Grayling Communications, Four Communications, Clifford Chance - won a combined £57.6m in individual contracts since 2015 (excluding any framework agreements they won jointly with other companies).
As the Office of the Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists says: “The Government’s intention behind the introduction of the Register was to enhance the transparency of those seeking to lobby Ministers and Permanent Secretaries on behalf of a third party”. registrarofconsultantlobbyists.org.uk
But place like the Home Office appear to award communication contracts to firms that can lobby it.
The biggest contract issued to lobbyists (outside framework agreements and the ‘Big 4’) was a £4.2m win to Four Communications for PR for the Home Office.
Despite the Register stating it is “important that the public can access information in a clear and easily understandable way” regarding lobbying, many lobby companies do not list any clients in the register.
We know Grayling Communications has lobbied for global corporations like Fujitsu and Hilton; Four Communications counts Pfizer and Novaris as former clients. But DLA Piper and Pinsent Masons listed NO clients publicly on the Register.
This is not unusual. There are many instances where lobbying firms have not registered clients. Of the Big 4 companies, Deloitte has never registered any, and KPMG has not registered any clients since 2017.
Despite his lobbying efforts making front pages, former PM David Cameron is not on the lobby list. The Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists published a statement on March 26 saying his “activities do not fall within the criteria that require registration” registrarofconsultantlobbyists.org.uk/investigation-…
It was reported the former PM lobbied the Chancellor as a paid employee, not consultant, for Lex Greensill. But given Cameron said in 2010 lobbying was ‘the next big scandal’ and helped set up the Register, perhaps he should have listed his name. theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
There’s no assertion any lobby companies acted illegally or improperly winning government contracts despite registering to lobby on behalf of other companies, but @allthecitizens feels it is important all potential conflicts of interest are addressed in the name of transparency.
So, we now know that it was Lord Brownlow who paid £58,000 towards the cost of makeover of the PM's Downing Street flat....
what hasn't been reported is that Brownlow, in his role as founder and director of Huntswood CTC Limited, has also benefited from government contracts.
The man ranked 521st richest person in UK with est. £271m fortune, who paid the Tory party nearly £60,000 towards Boris Johnson's requested refurbishments, runs a firm linked to awards of contracts worth as much as £120,060,000
The first we've found was that Huntswood was part of a framework agreement "for suppliers to provide skilled person reports" owned and managed by the Financial Conduct Authority.
That award was for up to £120m, granted in 2016 and ending last month.
Data analytics firm Palantir Technologies wins a new £1.2bn framework agreement published yesterday and awarded by the Crown Commercial Service. contractsfinder.service.gov.uk/notice/8d7bebf…
Palantir is featured as one of 31 companies funded to help Crown Commercial Service, the largest public sector procurement portal in the UK, establish a contracting route for “Back Office Software” to be used by central government departments and all other UK Public Sector bodies
The contract began on 6th April 2021, and will run until 6th October 2023 with a 30 month agreement with the option to extend for a further 18 months, and the new back office software will be deployed among the following public sector bodies looking to purchase software from CCS:
EXCLUSIVE: Half of all donations by registered UK political lobbyists since the register was established in 2015 have gone directly to the Conservative Party, research by @allthecitizens and @BylineTimes can reveal. THREAD:
In March 2015, a register of lobbyists was established by the Office of the Registrar of Consultant Lobbyists to ensure “transparency about the work of consultant lobbyists and their engagement with Ministers and Permanent Secretaries on behalf of clients” assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
Research by @allthecitizens / @BylineTimes can reveal 49% of the total £830,433 amount donated to political parties went to the Conservatives, in contrast to just 14% to Labour. The Lib Dems made up the rest (largely in ‘in kind’ donations from consultancies).
Emergency contracting rules - given concerns about widespread cronyism, just how long will UK’s public bodies go on awarding government contracts without tender?
Answer: the Cabinet Office isn't saying.
THREAD
In March 2020, as the UK went into lockdown, the gov issued a “guidance notice” (PPN 01/20) on how public bodies could procure goods and services without tendering them, due to the emergency situation. gov.uk/government/pub…
This encouraged various public bodies to issue ‘direct awards’ to suppliers without tendering them, invoking Regulation 32(2)(c) under the Public Contract Regulations (PCR) 2015.
Or the total £1bn in public funds issued to Tory donors during its pandemic response so far, with a further £2bn given away to associates, ex-politicians, and aides with roles in award-winning companies?