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Prime Minister orders investigation into Tory chairman Nadhim Zahawi amid tax questions

23 Jan 2023 4 minute read
Former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi (L) Photo James Manning. Rishi Sunak. Photo Victoria Jones PA Images

Rishi Sunak has ordered an investigation into Nadhim Zahawi as the Tory party chairman faced growing calls to quit after paying a penalty to resolve a multimillion-pound tax dispute.

The Prime Minister asked new ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus on Monday to assess whether the former chancellor breached the ministerial code with the HMRC settlement.

Mr Sunak said he was not leader at the time and insisted the advice he received when he gave Mr Zahawi a Cabinet-attending role was that there was “no reason” not to appoint him.

He defied Labour demands to sack the minister, who he insisted “acted properly throughout” amid questions as he welcomed the chance to answer “any and all specific questions in a formal setting” amid concerns about the settlement estimated at around £5 million.

Mr Sunak said he was launching an investigation because “clearly in this case there are questions that need answering”.

“That’s why I’ve asked our independent adviser to get to the bottom of everything, to investigate the matter fully and establish all the facts and provide advice to me on Nadhim Zahawi’s compliance with the ministerial code,” he told broadcasters during a visit to a Northampton hospital.

“I’m pleased that Nadhim Zahawi has agreed with that approach and has agreed to fully co-operate with that investigation.”

30% penalty

Mr Zahawi was understood to have paid a penalty – reported by the Guardian to be around 30% – during the time he was chancellor under Boris Johnson between July and September.

It was one of two scandals Mr Sunak was dealing with relating to Mr Johnson’s period in No 10, with BBC chairman Richard Sharp reportedly helping the then-prime minister secure a loan of up to £800,000.

Mr Sunak distanced himself from the allegations surrounding Mr Zahawi, who he appointed chairman in October.

“The questions that are being asked relate to a time before I was Prime Minister. When I was Prime Minister, the advice that I received was that there was no reason why Nadhim Zahawi could not be appointed to government,” he said.

Mr Sunak insisted it was “longstanding practice” for Mr Zahawi to continue in the role while under investigation.

In a statement, Mr Zahawi said: “I welcome the Prime Minister’s referral of this matter to the independent adviser on ministerial standards. I look forward to explaining the facts of this issue to Sir Laurie Magnus and his team.

“I am confident I acted properly throughout and look forward to answering any and all specific questions in a formal setting to Sir Laurie.”

He said it would be “inappropriate to discuss this issue any further” while continuing as Conservative chairman.

One ally had been adamant Mr Zahawi would be staying on, saying: “He is absolutely not resigning.”

Error

Mr Zahawi, the MP for Stratford-upon-Avon, has insisted his “error” over shares in the YouGov polling company he co-founded was “careless and not deliberate”.

He was also facing new allegations that he falsely told officials he had not exchanged WhatsApp messages with Conservative former prime minister David Cameron, who was lobbying for government loans for Greensill Capital.

The Times reported that it later emerged the pair had discussed the since-collapsed firm when messages were released to a select committee inquiry.

On Monday, Mr Zahawi said “morning” to waiting reporters and cameras as he arrived at Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ), but gave no comment on his financial affairs or position.

Former Downing Street communications chief Sir Craig Oliver said Mr Zahawi is “hanging on by a thread”.

“I think he’s in serious trouble, you cannot be Conservative Party chairman and not go out and face the media,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“The problem for Nadhim Zahawi at the moment is it doesn’t all add up. Why did you take the job as chancellor when you were clearly in dispute with the HMRC, and he is yet to come out with an answer that is satisfying or feels comfortable on that point.”

A challenging weekend for Mr Sunak began when police fined him for failing to wear a seatbelt as he filmed a social media clip in the back of a moving car.

On Monday, he told broadcasters: “In this instance, I made a mistake which I regret deeply and that’s why I apologised straight away.”

It was his second police fine – after paying a fixed-penalty notice during the partygate affair and strained Mr Sunak’s vow on entering No 10 to ensure “integrity, professionalism and accountability at every level of the Government”.


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Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

Are we to believe that these people are fit to govern, a vote of no confidence is in order…

dai ponty
dai ponty
1 year ago

It will be what it always is when Tory are investigated nothing found a WHITEWASH THEY ARE ROTTEN AND CORRUPT

hdavies15
hdavies15
1 year ago

Investigation? – more a case of check it out, then decide – whitewash, or distance and dump! Make sure nothing sticks to Rishi’s blanket

Frank
Frank
1 year ago

What’s the odds on him coming out of this squeaky clean and it will be someone else’s “error”.

Y Cymro
Y Cymro
1 year ago

Looks like another whitewash by the Whitehall elite. Do as we say not as we do, their mantra.

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

How may EU conflict of interest laws outlawing such behaviour are being erased by Rees-Mogg this week?

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

Sunak says he don’t know nothing about nothing…

They must keep him in the dark and feed him BS…like they do us…

Lionel Bray
Lionel Bray
1 year ago

Nadhim is a lovely bloke and a very successful entrepreneur. I really wish these woke people would just leave him alone.

Windy
Windy
1 year ago
Reply to  Lionel Bray

Al Capone must have seemed like lovely bloke to some people but he also failed to pay his taxes

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
1 year ago

This is going to be the fastest ‘mark your own homework’ exercise ever. (Investigation THEY call it). It will have to completed by Wednesday at 11am in time for Zahawi to go by PMQs at Midday.

Frank
Frank
1 year ago

It’s time to clear Westminster out of all party members including administration staff as I believe they are all corrupt to the core. They make rules to suit themselves and their prosperous colleagues and weasel themselves out of any inappropriate behaviour, something Joe Bloggs could not possibly do. They are all millionaires and even some, I believe, are billionaires so what do they know about hardship? They know absolutely zilch about housekeeping but they know everything about ripping off the UK public. They are only there ror the good of themselves and not the UK. We need some genuine working… Read more »

Windy
Windy
1 year ago

It’s not only misleading farcement should be a criminal offence it should also apply to misleading the general public that way the offender would be judged by a jury from the people and if found guilty they would loose their seat in nestminster

Windy
Windy
1 year ago

Are these the same independent advisors that are used to set wage levels, the ones that act on what the government sets the criteria for them to follow ????
I wonder what the verdict will be.

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