Politics

EU to crack down on lobbying as Good Law Project unveil more VIP hand-outs in UK

EU institutions voted through major new transparency rules this week in a bid to combat lobbying practices that have become increasingly prevalent during the Covid pandemic.

The European Parliament, Council and Commission are putting special measures in place and making registration de facto mandatory in their Transparency Register.

Polish MEP Danuta Hübner, who was behind the proposals, said they are “turning a new page for transparent decision-making at EU level,” while German MEP and lawyer Katarina Barley said the bloc had set a “positive example” in an effort to “shift the paradigm across the board”.

Fortunately for the Conservatives, the UK escaped such clampdowns just in time.

Following the Greensill lobbying scandal, this evening The Good Law project released the names of four more companies awarded contracts through the VIP lane: Clandeboye Agencies, P14 Medical, Luxe Lifestyle and Meller Designs.

P14 Medical, run by a Tory councillor and donor, was awarded £276 million in PPE contracts, while Meller Designs, run by David Meller a large Tory donor and trustee of the rightwing lobby group Policy Exchange, received more than £160 million.

Luxe Lifestyle managed to get their hands on a £26 million contract despite appearing to be insolvent and without any employees, and Clandeboye Agencies, who appear to be wholesale sellers of sugar, chocolate and confectionary, was awarded £108 million to supply PPE.

Thank god for Brexit!

Related: UK aid cut: UN reveals ‘sickening’ numbers of child and maternal deaths that could have been saved

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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