Monday 25th of November 2024

private affairs .....

private affairs .....

The Whistleblower who informed The Sunday Times about the lobbyist offering access to David Cameron, which led to the resignation yesterday of party fund-raiser Peter Cruddas, not to mention the fascinating revelations about the PM's "come upstairs" supper club for wealthy donors, has asked the police to investigate whether the Tory leadership flouted laws banning political parties from taking foreign donations.

Mark Adams, himself a lobbyist, was appalled to hear Sarah Southern boasting at the Tory party conference of making "a tidy sum" out of introducing a client to Cameron. He informed The Sunday Times, who sent two reporters from the Insight team, posing as overseas financiers, to see her.

Southern in turn introduced the pair to Cruddas who was caught with his trousers down, offering access to the PM for donations of £250,000 and above. The fact that the money would be coming from overseas, illegal under British election law, was of little concern to Cruddas: there were ways round that, he intimated.

Cruddas had no choice but to resign. Now Cameron is under pressure to name the lobbyists and businessmen who have been introduced to the delights of the Leader's Group, and "come upstairs" for private dinners at Number Ten.

Cameron is holding the line for the moment by insisting he does not have to disclose their names because Number Ten, where he lives with his wife Samantha and their children, is his private home, and the dinners were private affairs.

Francis Maude, the oleaginous Cabinet Minister, insisted on the Today programme this morning that it should be left to an internal Conservative party inquiry to see if rules had been broken.  

Refusing to disclose the names of high-value donors who have supped at Downing Street, Maude said: "It's unreasonable... Anyone who has joined the Leader's Group will have been at dinners where the Prime Minister was present. This is a bit of nonsense."

Maude's performance was met with ridicule in the Twittersphere and even the Tory party's usual friends don't think this line can hold. Daily Mail political editor James Chapman tweeted: "No 10 will not publish details #cashforcameron. ridiculous. Full disclosure only option now."

As if that wasn't enough, Rupert Murdoch has entered the picture, praising his paper's Insight team investigation with this tweet: "Great Sunday Times scoop. What was Cameron thinking? No-one, rightly or wrongly, will believe his story."

Murdoch, persona non grata in Downing Street since the hacking scandal, even had the chutzpah to add: "Without trust, democracy and order will go. Of course there must be a full independent inquiry on both sides. In great detail, and with consequences. Trust must be established."

Clearly enjoying himself for the first time in ages, the Dirty Digger went on: "Cameron should have just followed history and flogged some seats in the Lords, if they still have value! precedents of centuries."

Meanwhile, Adams, a Labour-supporting lobbyist, is asking officers to investigate whether the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act was breached. Scotland Yard said today it was looking into his complaint.

Adams said: "Peter Cruddas made it perfectly clear the kind of techniques he was suggesting to The Sunday Times have been used in the past."

Many parallels have been drawn between Tony Blair and David Cameron since the latter came to power nearly two years ago. Now it's possible he could emulate his predecessor by being interviewed by the police.

Sweet revenge for Rupert Murdoch as Tory donor row escalates

... along with their wives...

British prime minister David Cameron has been forced to release a list of wealthy party donors he has wined and dined at his Downing Street home.

The move follows the resignation of Conservative Party treasurer Peter Cruddas, who was caught telling undercover reporters they could buy access to Mr Cameron and influence the government.

Mr Cameron was quick to deny that was the way his party did business, but after pressure from the opposition he finally relented on demands to reveal which big donors he had entertained in Downing Street and his Chequers country home.

He listed four small evening gatherings in Downing Street held since Mr Cameron took power in 2010, including one on November 2 last year attended by Ian Taylor, chief executive of Vitol, the world's biggest oil trader, metals hedge fund tycoon Michael Farmer and banker Henry Angest, along with their wives.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-03-27/british-pm-discloses-details-of-donor-dinners/3914460

all in la famiglia .....

Media reports that Rupert Murdoch's News Corp promoted the pirating of its international pay-TV rivals were serious, and allegations of any criminality should be investigated by police, the Australian government said today.

"These are serious allegations and any allegations of criminal activity should be referred to the Australian Federal Police for investigation," a spokesperson for Senator Conroy said.

Separately, Treasurer Wayne Swan told a conference in Melbourne that the allegations of News piracy were "concerning".

The Australian Financial Review said today that News Corp had used a special unit, Operational Security, set up in the mid-1990s, to sabotage its competitors.

Their actions devastated News's competitors, and the resulting waves of high-tech piracy assisted News to bid for pay TV businesses at reduced prices - including DirecTV in the US, Telepiu in Italy and Austar. These targets each had other commercial weaknesses quite apart from piracy, the AFR says.

In Britain, Murdoch's TV media empire is being accused of corporate espionage, computer hacking and piracy in a campaign that allegedly destroyed a rival to the lucrative satellite broadcaster BSkyB.

News Corporation's then-software security arm, NDS, recruited a hacker to unlock its competitors' smartcards in 1996, the BBC's investigative program Panorama has claimed.

The cards have a microchip and pay-TV subscribers put them into a set-top box to allow them to receive pay-TV channels. If pirated, they allow viewers to get the channels free and the pay-TV provider loses hundreds of millions in revenue.

Witnesses on Panorama alleged that NDS hired a top computer hacker to crack the codes of a rival company, ONdigital, which eventually collapsed amid a bonanza of counterfeiting.

This left the pay-TV field in Britain clear for Sky, which is 39.1 per cent owned by News Corp.

News piracy allegations should be investigated by police: Conroy

standing in the long grass .....

A major donor to the Conservative Party proposed the dilution of workplace rights in a report which won the backing of David Cameron but was blocked by the Liberal Democrats.

Adrian Beecroft, a venture capitalist who has given £593,000 to the Conservatives since Mr Cameron became leader in 2005, recommended companies be allowed to sack unproductive workers at will. The businessman, whose interests include payday loans company Wonga.com, argued that "coasting" workers inhibit economic growth and deter employers from recruiting.

Many of his sweeping proposals would have gone ahead if the Tories governed alone, Lib Dem ministers claimed, because Nick Clegg's party could not have mounted its strong rearguard action inside the Coalition.

Following the cash-for-access row, some civil servants are said to be worried about the involvement of a Tory donor in the Government's policy-making process. "It has raised eyebrows," said one Whitehall source.

Peter Cruddas, the Tories' former co-treasurer, claimed to undercover reporters that big donors could have their ideas fed into the Downing Street policy unit - a charge denied by No 10.

Cameron allies insist there was no reason to bar Mr Beecroft from advising the Government because he had given money to the Tories. He was not among the Tory donors entertained by Mr Cameron at Downing Street or Chequers and there is no suggestion that his companies would have benefited directly from the reforms he proposed.

His report, submitted last autumn, remains shrouded in mystery. Unusually for a Government-ordered study, it has not been published. Downing Street is coy about who commissioned it. The driving force is believed to be Steve Hilton, Mr Cameron's strategy adviser, who is leaving No 10 in May.

Ministers believe the report has not been published as it is too sensitive. Ideas are said to include watering down maternity rights, which would have jeopardised Mr Cameron's goal of making Britain the most "family-friendly" country in Europe. Another official said: "His report was full of the Tory millionaires' philosophy that government should not interfere in anything."

Mr Beecroft's plan for "no fault dismissal" was taken up by Mr Cameron and George Osborne, the Chancellor. It would allow a company to fire unproductive workers without the right to claim unfair dismissal, but they would receive statutory redundancy pay.

Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, whose department is responsible for employment law, said he did not want to bring in a "hire and fire culture". Unlike Mr Beecroft, he detected little demand for such rules.

After a row in the Coalition, a compromise was reached in which Mr Cable agreed to consider "no-fault dismissal" for firms employing fewer than 10 people. But he said he has no intention of bringing it in. A Liberal Democrat source said: "It's in the long, long grass."

Ed Miliband will today seek to capitalise on the cash-for-access controversy by linking it to the Budget. He will say: "The last week has shown this Government for what it is: one that works for the millionaires... David Cameron prefers to listen to those who have given millions of pounds to the Conservative Party in exchange for donor dinners and special access in Downing Street."

The Labour leader will issue a five-point "action plan" to help a squeezed "Middle Britain" similar to the credit-card sized "pledge card" which helped Tony Blair win a landslide in 1997. The plan includes stopping the Budget's "granny tax" and the reduction in the 50p top rate. In an attempt to reassure voters worried that Labour would spend too much, Mr Miliband will say: "These are measures that do not require extra spending. But they do require a different set of priorities; different values; a government that is on your side, and sometimes the courage to take on powerful and well-financed organisations which will not like it."

The £100m man: Beecroft's fortune

Adrian Beecroft has been a leading figure for 25 years in venture capital and private equity. He joined Apax in 1984 and grew its funds to $20bn before retiring as its senior managing partner. He is now chairman of Dawn Capital - which owns Wonga.com, the online short-term high-interest loans company - and his estimated wealth is £100m. He conceded a "downside" of his main proposal is employers could be accused of firing staff they "did not like," but said: "While this is sad, I believe it is a price worth paying for all the benefits that would result from the change."

Party's over for persona non grata

Sarah Southern used to boast that at one time she had spent more time with David Cameron than "with anybody else in my life". But yesterday Downing Street made clear that she would never knowingly be allowed in the same room as him again after her pivotal role in introducing the party to fake potential donors.

The Prime Minister's spokes- woman said Ms Southern was "persona non grata" after she unwittingly brought undercover reporters to the door of the party's joint Treasurer Peter Cruddas and unleashed the cash-for-access scandal.

Although not high profile, as an events manager Ms Southern had significant access to Mr Cameron. She travelled on the Conservative battle bus and was responsible for making sure trips went smoothly.

"I spent more time in the first third of [2010] with DC than I did with anybody else in my life," she said. "I am friends with all the people who are now his closest advisers... I'm also friends with a number of people in the Cabinet."

In June 2011 she set up her own company, Sarah Southern Consulting - with a business card showing her with the Prime Minister.

It is unlikely to get much business now.

Cameron Wanted To Wave Through Donor's Policy To Destroy Rights Of Workers

guess what...

Our Tony is on the same page as Cameron on this doozie... Destroy destroy destroy the rights of workers... Unless the workers are (Liberal – conservatives) women who should get a loooonnnng maternity leave and a nanny so they can go and vegetate below the glass ceiling of their chosen career, while shopping, and while being harrassed by the male folk for Liberal (conservative) fun... The rest aren't pretty enough... All this lastic band generosity of course, "depending on budget" and on Tony's hypocrisy pointing to the stench of Labor armpits — while his budgies are smelling like old fish.