Tag: Nadhim Zahawi

  • Nadhim Zahawi’s case: Sunak defends his actions, says he dealt with case decisively

    Nadhim Zahawi’s case: Sunak defends his actions, says he dealt with case decisively

    The Tory Party chairman, Nadhim Zahawi, was fired on Sunday, and Rishi Sunak has defended his handling of the situation by asserting that he followed “the right process.”

    The PM’s ethics adviser conducted an investigation and found that Mr. Zahawi had violated the ministerial code seven times while concealing the fact that HMRC was looking into his tax affairs.

    As soon as the investigation was over, Mr. Sunak claimed he “acted pretty decisively.”

    According to Labour, Mr. Zahawi should have been fired by the prime minister “long ago.”

    Deputy leader Angela Rayner called Mr Sunak a “hopelessly weak” prime minister who had “been dragged kicking and screaming into doing what he should have done long ago”.

    “Rishi Sunak shouldn’t have needed an ethics adviser to tell him that Nadhim Zahawi’s position was untenable,” she said.

    Ms Rayner and Labour Party chair Anneliese Dodds have now written to the prime minister asking him to “come clean” about when he was made aware of the HMRC investigation into Mr Zahawi.

    But speaking in County Durham, the prime minister defended his handling of the situation and stressed his commitment to “integrity”.

    “What I have done is follow a process, which is the right process,” he said.

    “As soon as I knew about the situation, I appointed somebody independent, looked at it, got the advice and acted pretty decisively to move on.

    “The things that happened before I was prime minister, I can’t do anything about. What I think you can hold me to account for is how I deal with the things that arise on my watch.”

    Mr. Sunak also stated that he will “take whatever steps are necessary to restore the integrity of politics.”

    Asked if Mr Sunak had ever asked Mr Zahawi about press reports about his tax affairs, his spokesman declined to comment, saying he wouldn’t discuss private conversations.

    Speaking to reporters on Monday, the spokesman added that the PM had been advised there were were no outstanding issues involving HMRC when he appointed Mr Zahawi in October.

    Britain's Minister without portfolio Nadhim Zahawi arrives for a Cabinet meeting at Downing Street in London, Britain, 17 January 2023
    Image caption,Nadhim Zahawi had served as Conservative Party chairman and minister without portfolio in Rishi Sunak’s government

    The BBC understands that Mr Zahawi had paid around £5m in total, including a penalty. At the time he was responsible for the UK’s tax system as chancellor under Boris Johnson.

    Mr Zahawi has previously insisted that he acted properly, and that his tax error was “careless and not deliberate”.

    Supporters of Mr Zahawi have raised concerns about the ethics probe with the BBC, saying he had only one meeting with the prime minister’s independent ethics adviser Sir Laurie Magnus.

    They questioned whether due process had been followed and suggested Mr Zahawi had not been allowed to make sufficient representations.

    ‘Omissions’

    Mr Sunak’s spokesman rejected suggestions the probe was rushed, insisting Sir Laurie had been given enough time to establish the facts.

    Sir Laurie found Mr Zahawi’s “omissions” of information constituted a “serious failure to meet the standards set out in the ministerial code”.

    He was also critical of the MP for describing news stories about his tax affairs as “smears” in July 2022, and failing to correct the record until earlier this month.

    “I consider that this delay in correcting an untrue public statement is inconsistent with the requirement for openness,” he said.

    After receiving the findings on Sunday, Mr Sunak wrote to Mr Zahawi to say he had decided to remove him from government.

    Mr Zahawi thanked the prime minister and said he took pride in his role in the vaccine rollout and the Queen’s funeral – but did not offer an apology or mention his tax affairs.

    He promised to support the prime minister “from the backbenches in the coming years.”

    Timeline

    April 2021: HMRC starts having interactions with Mr Zahawi, including a meeting with him and his advisers. Mr Zahawi – who was vaccines minister at the time – told Sir Laurie he believed he was “merely being asked certain queries” rather than being investigated. Sir Laurie says Mr Zahawi should have understood this was “a serious matter” and included it in his declaration of interests

    15 September 2021: Mr Zahawi is made education secretary by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Sir Laurie says Mr Zahawi again failed to declare his interest

    5 July 2022: He is promoted to chancellor. He completes a declaration of interest for his new role but makes no reference to an investigation by HMRC

    10 July 2022: Mr Zahawi describes reports he is being investigated by HMRC as “smears”

    15 July 2022: He receives a letter from HMRC and subsequently updates his declaration of interests to acknowledge an investigation was under way.

    August 2022: Mr Zahawi reaches an agreement with HMRC for failing to take “reasonable care”. The BBC has been told the total amount paid was about £5m

    September 2022: A final settlement is agreed with HMRC but Mr Zahawi does not update his declaration of interest form with the new information

    September and October 2022: Mr Zahawi becomes a levelling up minister under Liz Truss’s short-lived premiership and Tory Party chair under Rishi Sunak. Again, Mr Zahawi does not update his declaration of interest form

    21 January 2023: Mr Zahawi issues a statement acknowledging he reached a settlement with HMRC following an investigation

    23 January 2023: The prime minister asks his ethics adviser Sir Laurie to look into the disclosures made about the tax affairs of Mr Zahawi

    29 January 2023: The PM receives Sir Laurie’s report, which found there had been a “serious breach of the ministerial code”, and Mr Zahawi is sacked.

  • Nadhim Zahawi seriously violated the ministerial code – Rishi Sunak

    Nadhim Zahawi seriously violated the ministerial code – Rishi Sunak

    As pressure over his tax affairs grew, Nadhim Zahawi was removed from office.

    The investigation into Mr. Zahawi’s financial affairs, according to the prime minister, revealed a “serious breach of the ministerial code,” according to the prime minister.

    After learning that Mr. Zahawi had paid a penalty to HMRC for previously unpaid tax while serving as chancellor, Rishi Sunak ordered the investigation.

    According to Mr. Zahawi, HRMC acknowledged that the error was “careless and not intentional.”

    In a letter to Mr Zahawi, Mr Sunak said the MP could be “extremely proud of your wide-ranging achievements in government over the last five years”.

    He specifically cited Mr Zahawi’s work overseeing the Covid vaccine, saying it was “critical to ensuring our country came through this crisis and saved many lives”.

    Mr Zahawi had come under increased scrutiny after he confirmed he had made a payment to settle a dispute with HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC).

    The BBC understands the dispute was resolved between July and September last year, when he was chancellor and in charge of the tax system.

    The total amount paid was in the region of about £5m, including a penalty, the BBC understands.

    On Monday, Mr Sunak had asked his independent ethics adviser, Sir Laurie Magnus, to look into the disclosures about Mr Zahawi’s tax affairs, saying there were “questions that need answering”.

    In his findings, sent to Mr Sunak on Sunday morning, Sir Laurie said Mr Zahawi had shown “insufficient regard for the principles of the general principles of the ministerial code and the requirements in particular under the seven Principles of Public Life, to be honest, open and an exemplary leader through his own behaviour”.

    “I also fully appreciate the pressures faced by ministers as they address the complex issues of government and the difficulties they encounter in balancing the demands of their personal lives and their ministerial responsibilities.

    “These factors, however, cannot mitigate my overall judgement that Mr Zahawi’s conduct as a minister has fallen below the high standards that, as prime minister, you rightly expect from those who serve in your government.”

    Nadhim Zahawi’s tax affairs have been a headache for the government for the past 10 days.

    Rishi Sunak has argued that due process is important. But he’s faced accusations he was weak for not acting earlier to get rid of Mr Zahawi.

    The PM got the report from his ethics adviser early this morning. He spoke to Mr Zahawi to tell him he was being sacked, then it was confirmed publicly.

    The report from Sir Laurie Magnus left little room for any other conclusion than Mr Zahawi’s departure.

    He said Mr Zahawi showed insufficient regard for the principles ministers are expected to follow.

  • Macleod to Kwarteng: The two Conservative Chancellors who spent less than 40 days in office

    Following his nomination, Kwasi Kwarteng served as Chancellor of the Exchequer for just 38 days before being fired on Friday, October 14. This makes him one of the chancellors with the shortest tenures.

    The actions Kwarteng made during the presentation of the UK mini-budget, which caused some financial turmoil and outrage from Tory MPs, were a major factor in his removal.

    At a news conference, British Prime Minister Liz Truss announced a reversal of some important initiatives and the cancellation of the proposed increase in corporation tax from 19 to 25 percent.

    She then announced that Jeremy Hunt will become Kwasi Kwarteng’s successor.

    Kwasi Kwarteng, 47, took over as head of the British Treasury in September 2022, after Prime Minister, Liz Truss, took over. He had the responsibility of trying to pull the UK out of a serious cost-of-living crisis without plunging the public finances into the abyss.

    He took over from Nadhim Zahawi, an Iraqi-born Kurd, who himself succeeded Rishi Sunak, of Indian origin, and Sajid Javid, with Pakistani roots, embodying a more inclusive face of the Conservative party.

    His sack makes him the second shortest-serving UK chancellor on record. He lasted eight days longer than Iain Macleod, also a Conservative, who died just 30 days into the job.

    Who was Iain MacLeod?

    Iain Macleod was a British Conservative politician and government minister. He entered Parliament as an MP in 1950.

    MacLeod as health minister and minister for Labour, before overseeing the independence of African countries from British rule as secretary of state for the colonies under Harold Macmillan in the early 60s.

    He refused to serve in the government of Harold Macmillan’s successor, Sir Alec Douglas-Home, instead joining The Spectator as editor.

    Mr Macleod returned to government after being appointed chancellor by Edward Heath on 20 June 1970 following an unexpected Conservative election victory. He served for a total of 30 days as Chancellor.

    Despite being in pain, he made his sole major speech on the economy as chancellor five days later, lamenting high levels of inflation and unemployment.

    Mr Macleod was rushed to the hospital later the same day with a pelvic diverticulum, a condition affecting the digestive system.

    He was discharged 11 days later, on 20 July, only to suffer a heart attack inside 11 Downing Street, where he died at 11.35 pm.