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Friday, November 15, 2024

Sir Shameless is at it AGAIN! Hours after Wardrobegate erupted, PM and Sue Gray enjoy Spurs freebie with lobbyist who backed hated breakaway football super league and advises tax-avoiding tech giants


The freebie row engulfing Sir Keir Starmer deepened tonight as it was revealed that he shared lavish football hospitality with a powerful lobbyist who backed the hated breakaway Super League.

The Prime Minister and his embattled chief of staff Sue Gray enjoyed a corporate box at Tottenham Hotspur last Sunday, just hours after fresh ‘Wardrobegate’ allegations emerged about clothes Sir Keir and his wife had taken from Labour donor Lord Alli.

Tickets were funded by Spurs, one of the six clubs which mounted the 2021 attempt to leave the Premier League – a plan that was abandoned following a furious reaction from fans.

And sitting next to Ms Gray – who is facing open revolt in No 10 over her management style – was Katie Perrior, the founder and chair of iNHouse Communications, which worked on the attempt to form the Super League. Other clients include tech giants such as Google, who have been criticised for their legal tax avoidance.

Sir Keir’s party for Tottenham’s clash with his beloved Arsenal also included Foreign Secretary David Lammy.

Sir Shameless is at it AGAIN! Hours after Wardrobegate erupted, PM and Sue Gray enjoy Spurs freebie with lobbyist who backed hated breakaway football super league and advises tax-avoiding tech giants

The Prime Minister and his embattled chief of staff Sue Gray enjoyed a corporate box at Tottenham Hotspur last Sunday. Tickets were funded by Spurs, one of the six clubs which mounted the 2021 attempt to leave the Premier League – a plan that was abandoned following a furious reaction from fans

And sitting next to Ms Gray at the Spurs game was Katie Perrior (pictured), the founder and chair of iNHouse Communications, which worked on the attempt to form the Super League

And sitting next to Ms Gray at the Spurs game was Katie Perrior (pictured), the founder and chair of iNHouse Communications, which worked on the attempt to form the Super League

Sir Keir has received many more freebies than any other MP since becoming Labour leader, receiving £107,145-worth since 2019. Lord Alli (pictured) was the biggest donor, giving the equivalent of £39,122, including accommodation worth £20,437

Sir Keir has received many more freebies than any other MP since becoming Labour leader, receiving £107,145-worth since 2019. Lord Alli (pictured) was the biggest donor, giving the equivalent of £39,122, including accommodation worth £20,437

Senior Tory MP John Glen said: ‘Is there no freebie that Sir Keir will not take? His behaviour is as hypocritical as it is incredible. And in view of Labour’s plans for a new football regulator, his presence and that of Sue Gray is a clear conflict of interest.’

Sir Keir has accepted nearly £40,000 worth of free tickets for football matches over the past five years, which critics say threatens his impartiality over the planned regulator, which would have the power to stop teams joining breakaway leagues and to block investment from controversial countries.

Tory MP Ben Obese-Jecty said: ‘Keir Starmer pledged to crack down on lobbying yet he seems comfortable to be lobbied if it affords him privileged access to watch Premier League football. For the governance of our national game to be agreed by the PM via informal meetings in VIP boxes over prawn sandwiches, with Sue Gray again shaping policy and without Civil Service oversight, should be a huge concern to football fans across the country.’

Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner was tonight accused of breaching parliamentary rules by failing to declare that a friend had joined her on a personal holiday funded by Lord Alli.

The friend, Sam Tarry, paid for his flights but stayed with her at the Labour peer’s $2.5 million apartment in Manhattan for the New Year’s Eve break. Rayner’s team claimed that Tarry’s stay did not need to be officially registered.

Sir Keir has accepted nearly £40,000 worth of free tickets for football matches over the past five years, which critics say threatens his impartiality over the planned regulator

Sir Keir has accepted nearly £40,000 worth of free tickets for football matches over the past five years, which critics say threatens his impartiality over the planned regulator

The Daily Mail published an exclusive picture today showing Ms Gray in tense talks with Michael Bourke, the principal private secretary to Cabinet Secretary Sir Simon Case, who has been battling Ms Gray over access to the PM

The Daily Mail published an exclusive picture today showing Ms Gray in tense talks with Michael Bourke, the principal private secretary to Cabinet Secretary Sir Simon Case, who has been battling Ms Gray over access to the PM

The Premier League members of the proposed European Super League. The PM watched the Spurs game last Sunday with a powerful lobbyist who backed the hated breakaway Super League

The Premier League members of the proposed European Super League. The PM watched the Spurs game last Sunday with a powerful lobbyist who backed the hated breakaway Super League

The revelation that Ms Gray used the Tottenham hospitality box comes as she faces mounting opposition within Downing Street over her ‘heavy-handed’ and ‘cronyist’ management style.

In a development which will increase the pressure on her, sources have told The Mail on Sunday that Ms Gray personally signed off the controversial pass to No10 which Lord Alli used in the weeks after the general election.

This newspaper can also disclose that the Prime Minister’s officials are in open revolt about being cut out of meetings with Sir Keir. All 12 senior civil servants in his private office have either quit, asked to be moved or said to be considering leaving.

The Daily Mail published an exclusive picture today showing Ms Gray in tense talks with Michael Bourke, the principal private secretary to Cabinet Secretary Sir Simon Case, who has been battling Ms Gray over access to the PM. An onlooker told the MoS: ‘It was unbelievable – it certainly wasn’t a nice conversation. He looked upset and she wasn’t smiling at any point… I’ve never seen anything like it before.’

Sir Keir has received many more freebies than any other MP since becoming Labour leader, receiving £107,145-worth since 2019. Lord Alli was the biggest donor, giving the equivalent of £39,122, including accommodation worth £20,437.

The PM and his top team bowed to pressure this weekend and said they will no longer take donations for clothes. He accepted £16,200 of clothing and glasses worth £2,485 from Lord Alli. Chancellor Rachel Reeves accepted £7,500 for clothing while Ms Rayner took donations worth £3,550.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner (pictured with Sir Keir in Liverpool today) was tonight accused of breaching parliamentary rules by failing to declare that a friend had joined her on a personal holiday funded by Lord Alli

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner (pictured with Sir Keir in Liverpool today) was tonight accused of breaching parliamentary rules by failing to declare that a friend had joined her on a personal holiday funded by Lord Alli

Senior Tory MP John Glen said: ‘Is there no freebie that Sir Keir will not take? His behaviour is as hypocritical as it is incredible. And in view of Labour’s plans for a new football regulator, his presence and that of Sue Gray is a clear conflict of interest.’

Senior Tory MP John Glen said: ‘Is there no freebie that Sir Keir will not take? His behaviour is as hypocritical as it is incredible. And in view of Labour’s plans for a new football regulator, his presence and that of Sue Gray is a clear conflict of interest.’

Chancellor Rachel Reeves accepted £7,500 for clothing

Chancellor Rachel Reeves accepted £7,500 for clothing

Lord Alli proposed mandatory voting to reduce the ‘influence of money in politics’, according to the Daily Telegraph, citing a speech he made in July. It also reported he had demanded a crackdown on the press, calling for a new offence of ‘corporate intimidation’ to tackle what he called the ‘bullying’ of public figures by newspapers.

Arsenal has made two corporate seats available to Sir Keir in Emirates Stadium, which the PM says he took for security reasons.

Ms Perrior, who worked as director of communications for Prime Minister Theresa May from 2016 to 2017, was not available for comment, but there is no suggestion that she used the match as an opportunity to lobby Ministers.

A Downing Street source said the tickets were paid for by Tottenham Hotspur Stadium Ltd and would be declared ‘in the usual way’.

Freebie with lobbyist with pulls strings in Westminster

Katie Perrior is the boss of one of Westminster’s most powerful lobbying firms, representing global brands seeking to influence government policy for their own benefit.

The 46-year-old former special adviser to Theresa May has used her insider knowledge of the political system to attract high-profile clients such as Google, which has faced calls to pay more tax in the UK.

The US tech giant is also involved in a spat with the Competition and Markets Authority, which has accused the £1.5 trillion company of having an unfair stanglehold

on how much money websites and publishers can make

from advertising.

Another iNHouse client, Uber, is anxious to avoid moves by Labour to improve conditions and pay for wokers in the so-called ‘gig economy’. The firm has faced strikes by delivery drivers in the last year.

Ms Perrior also represented the backers of a planned European Super League, which collapsed 2021 following a major backlash from fans of the six English clubs that hoped to join. Labour plans to establish an independent football regulator to protect fans and block similar proposals, so the ESL may seek to influence how much control and power the watchdog will have.

Another client is drinks giant Diageo, the owner of Guinness, Johnnie Walker whisky, Gordon’s gin and Smirnoff vodka, which may be seeking to halt Labour’s mooted plans to launch major public health drive to decrease the amount people are drinking, which may include higher alcohol levies.

Labour figures have also previously refused to rule out the possibility of bringing in minimum unit pricing, which

is already in force in Scotland and Wales.

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