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Boris Johnson friend’s ‘luxury lifestyle’ firm handed £1.4m of government money to help super-rich ‘network’ with officials

Labour condemns contract with prime minister's Old Etonian tennis partner as 'blindingly obvious conflict of interest' – and demands investigation

Rob Merrick
Deputy Political Editor
Tuesday 03 March 2020 17:19 GMT
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Ben Elliot boasts powerful connections across British society, as the nephew of Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall
Ben Elliot boasts powerful connections across British society, as the nephew of Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall (Rex)

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A firm run by Boris Johnson’s tennis partner is being paid £1.4m of government cash to help officials “network” with some of the UK’s richest people, it has been revealed.

Labour has condemned the contract as “a blindingly obvious conflict of interest and a shocking waste of money” and demanded an investigation.

The money is being paid to Quintessentially, a “luxury lifestyle” company – co-founded by Ben Elliot, an Old Etonian friend of the prime minister – which charges well-heeled clients thousands of pounds to meet powerful people.

Mr Elliot was appointed co-chairman of the Conservative party last summer and raised funds for Mr Johnson’s election victory. In January 2019, he was picked as the government’s first “food waste tsar”.

Now the Financial Times has revealed that the Department for International Trade (DIT) has paid Quintessentially £1.4m to enable civil servants and the super-rich to “network at the highest levels”, under a contract that began in 2016.

It arranges “exceptional visits” in order for officials to convince them to invest in the UK, according to the contract it has seen.

Jon Trickett MP, Labour’s Cabinet Office minister, said: “Everybody knows the Conservatives are a party of the rich and powerful, for the rich and powerful, but these revelations further expose how they and their allies see government as a chance to make easy money at the public’s expense.

“Handing over taxpayers’ money to a company run by the Tory Party co-chair just so officials can meet the ‘great and good’ is a blindingly obvious conflict of interest and a shocking waste of money.

“The government must immediately stop paying for these services, and make a statement on why it thought it was appropriate to pay this company for them in the first place.”

Downing Street declined to comment on the controversy, while a DIT spokesperson said: “This contract was awarded almost four years ago. All proper legal processes were followed at the time it was awarded.”

Mr Elliot is the prime minister’s tennis partner for a game recently auctioned off to the wife of an ally of Vladimir Putin, to raise £90,000 for Conservative coffers.

Aged 44, he boasts powerful connections across British society. As the nephew of Camilla Parker-Bowles, the Duchess of Cornwall, he has been photographed with her husband, Prince Charles, the future king.

When Michael Gove picked him to tackle food waste, Mr Elliot told the Evening Standard it was because “I am such a relentless, bossy f***er that I will turbocharge the whole thing”.

He also acknowledged he had considered running as the Conservative candidate for the London seat of Kensington, saying: “Yes, I’ve thought about it. The professional political class is not great.”

Mr Elliot also praised Extinction Rebellion as “marvellous”, saying: “It’s a wonderful thing. It’s moved the debate on, making the penny drop on green issues.”

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