I’m only one paragraph into the government’s new export strategy – from Boris Johnson’s foreword no less – but the signs are not good. Let’s do a quick fact-check on four of the Prime Minister's points, and remember this is just the first paragraph...(1 of 6).
1. Actually, 35 weeks passed between the UK taking its seat at the WTO on 4/2/20 and the next FTA being signed – with Ukraine – on 8/10/20, part of a last-minute rush that, amongst other things, means the Ukraine deal now needs to be re-written to correct the legal errors made.
2. So far in 2021/22, we’ve seen a belated rollover deal signed with Serbia in April, and a revised deal signed with Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein in July. That’s it. Not a single trade agreement has been signed since we left the EU that we didn’t already have inside the EU.
3. Two-thirds? In 2019, we had free trade agreements covering 63% of UK trade, as a member of the EU and a party to the EU’s trade deals. In the first half of 2021, the share of UK trade covered by FTAs has fallen to 60.4%, as the value of our trade with Europe has collapsed.
4. It does go from A to Z as it happens. The Prime Minister has either forgotten about our trade deal with Zimbabwe, one of the many rolled over from our membership of the EU without any complaint about their human rights record, or didn’t want to highlight it.
Every time they publish some new trade strategy, I wonder if there’ll be some serious analysis of the opportunities and challenges in front of us, and an ambitious but practical plan about how we’ll approach them. And every time, we get nothing but this fantasy piffle.
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Here’s a curious tale involving Boris Johnson, the annual allowance for former Prime Ministers, and the man Kemi Badenoch chose to stand in for her at PMQs last month. Oh, and £67,803 of taxpayers’ money handed to Johnson that he wasn’t entitled to claim. (1/8)
First we go back to 31 March 2023, when a new version of the guidance was published covering the £115k per year ‘Public Duty Costs Allowance’ for ex-PMs. From what I could tell, the only change to the previous guidance related to the section below on claim processes. (2/8)
That got me interested. Why had they changed the guidance to make the rules less explicit about when claims needed to be submitted, and whether late claims would be accepted? So I asked the Cabinet Office whether any late claims had come in that year just gone? (3/8)
Many people have asked me what Labour would do differently to end the abuse of ministerial severance payments. This is how we plan to change the rules; a set of reforms that would have cut £378k, or 40%, from the Tory severance bill in 2022/23.🧵1/7 theguardian.com/politics/2024/…
First, anyone who leaves their job while under investigation for misconduct or breaches of the ministerial code would have their severance suspended, and quashed entirely if the allegations were upheld. That would have meant no payments at all to Peter Bone or Chris Pincher. 2/7
Second, we'd end the practice of ministers claiming three months of wages after just a few weeks in a job. They'd get a quarter of their actual earnings, not a quarter of their annual salary. That would have cut the payment for someone like Jonathan Gullis from £5,593 to £748.3/7
What on earth is going on here? Let me try and explain the story as I understand it. This starts with Rishi Sunak travelling on a private jet to the Tory conferences in Scotland and Wales on April 28th, which – as we know – is fairly standard for him. 1/5. theguardian.com/politics/2023/…
Originally, in May, Rishi Sunak said the £38,500 cost of that jet was donated by a medtech millionaire named Akhil Tripathi. But two weeks later, he changed his declaration to say the donation came from a firm called Balderton Medical Consultants. The two entries are below. 2/5.
But Balderton is a bit of a mystery. Last year, it only had £28,612 cash in the bank (according to Companies House), it doesn’t have a website, and the LinkedIn profile of its sole director and shareholder, Richard Kent (screenshot below) appears now to have been deleted. 3/5.
Here is today’s latest evidence of a government that can turn even the simplest idea into a total fiasco: a £5 million pilot scheme to give early legal advice to people with housing-related debts, which ended up helping just THREE individuals in the space of five months. 1/6
The Early Legal Advice Pilot has been in the works since 2019, designed to provide three hours of free support to individuals who wouldn’t normally get legal aid, to stop their debt problems landing them in court. Rishi Sunak announced £5m in funding for the pilot in 2020. 2/6
The pilot eventually got under way last November in Manchester and Middlesbrough, but there were problems from the outset with how potential beneficiaries were selected and directed for help. Below is a simplified guide to how the process worked in its first three months. 3/6
The Sunday Times today carries jaw-dropping extracts from the new Liz Truss book about three overseas trips she made shortly after becoming Trade Secretary in 2019. In this thread, I want to focus on one aspect of those revelations: her expenses. (1/10). thetimes.co.uk/article/liz-tr…
Earlier this year, I exposed the fact that Truss had failed to declare her full taxpayer-funded expenses on two trips in late 2020 to Japan and Singapore/Vietnam, and I started looking into whether she’d done the same on previous trips abroad. (2/10) mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
In the DIT’s official declarations of ministerial travel, hospitality, etc., published in Jan 2020, these were the entries for the three trips covered in today's Sunday Times story. Pay attention to the final column for the total costs of the trip, covering all expenses. (3/10)
This is a little bit strange from Penny Mordaunt. Either she was attending on behalf of the Foreign Office or she wasn’t. It’s not the kind of thing you’d forget.
Just for a bit of background, Penny Mordaunt tweeted last December that she was at the ‘Indo-Pacific Security Dialogue’ in California with Condoleezza Rice, Jim Mattis and others, but then didn’t declare it in March among the list of official meetings she held on that US tour.
Given there were official representatives taking part from India, Australia, Japan and the Pentagon – as well as UK consular staff – it stands to reason that Penny was representing the FCDO and MOD, hence why I asked her the question. I don’t know why that’s difficult to answer.