The Labour Party has called for a thorough investigation into lobbying in the UK government, amid a series of high profile lobbying scandals linked to coronavirus contracts in recent months.
What’s the background?
This week, health secretary Matt Hancock came under fire for reportedly waiting two months to declare his shares in a firm which was approved for NHS contracts.
Meanwhile, former prime minister David Cameron has been criticised for lobbying contacts at the treasury for a firm for which he was a senior adviser with share options reportedly worth $60 million.
What do Labour want?
Speaking on Sophy Ridge’s Sky News programme, Labour’s shadow communities secretary said the government needed an “open inquiry” into lobbying.
“What we need is an open inquiry and not one where the Conservatives are marking their own homework because Boris Johnson has shown repeatedly over the past year that he is not interested in exposing what is going wrong or stopping what’s going wrong,” Steve Reed said.
“If we have an independent parliamentary inquiry into what’s going on, open and transparent – and in David Cameron’s own words, sunlight is the best disinfectant – let’s expose this whole situation to sunlight, let’s see exactly what’s going on, let’s pull in everybody to public hearings that the public can see as well as MPs and find out what’s going on and let’s put in measures that prevent it from occurring.”
“One of them might well be that the Prime Minister should not be the person who decides whether there are investigations into his own ministers for breaches of the ministerial code.”