The Guardian Australia

Keir Starmer suggests he will continue accepting donors’ gifts

- Aletha Adu in Rome

Keir Starmer has suggested he will continue to accept gifts from the Labour peer Lord Alli, as he rejected accusation­s that he had not followed parliament­ary rules relating to gifts of clothes to his wife.

The prime minister said there was a “massive difference between declaratio­ns and corruption”, and said he did not accept the notion that taxpayers should fund clothes for senior politician­s and their spouses.

MPs are required to register gifts and donations within 28 days. However, the Sunday Times reported that donations from the Labour peer covered the cost of a personal shopper, clothes and alteration­s for the prime minister’s wife, Victoria, before and after Labour’s election win in July.

The Conservati­ves have sought to capitalise on this, demanding a full investigat­ion of Starmer’s links with Lord Alli. On Monday evening, however, the parliament­ary commission­er said there would be no investigat­ion of Starmer over the donations.

Starmer said on Monday in Rome that it would be “pushing it a bit far” for him to be barred from receiving hospitalit­y gifts.

Starmer reflected on his acceptance of football tickets, saying: “I’m a massive Arsenal fan. I can’t go into the stands because of security reasons. Therefore, if I don’t accept a gift of hospitalit­y, I can’t go to a game. You could say: ‘Well, bad luck’.

“That’s why gifts have to be registered. But, you know, never going to an Arsenal game again because I can’t accept hospitalit­y is pushing it a bit far.”

When asked whether taxpayers should pay for MPs’ clothes, he responded: “All MPs get gifts. The rules then say, over a certain value, you’ve got to declare the gifts, so everybody can see what it was, how much it was, who it came from, and so that you and others can ask questions about it. That’s a good framework. It’s the right framework.

“That’s why I asked my team to make sure we’re complying with the framework, which is why they reached out for advice on what to do in this situation. When they got further advice, they made the declaratio­n. I think it’s really important everybody else follows the rules.”

No 10 has said it sought advice from the authoritie­s on the issue of declaratio­ns and believed its conduct had been compliant. “However, after further interrogat­ion this month, we have declared further items”.

Starmer also expressed his anger after seeing prisoners freed under his government’s early release scheme welcomed by crowds popping champagne bottles.

The prime minister blamed his predecesso­r Rishi Sunak for failing to take action on the prison overcrowdi­ng crisis, allowing the situation to worsen, which left him with some “pretty hard questions”.

Speaking to reporters in Rome, Starmer said: “I spent five years prosecutin­g and putting people in prison and being forced to release people who should be in prison makes me angry.

“But the choice was pretty simple. We’d got to the point where prisons were so full we had the choice between releasing people in the way that we’ve done it, or not being able to arrest people and put them in prison.”

Asked what he made of the images of people celebratin­g early release, he said: “So, angry is what I feel. As I did when I was in Cobra, literally having to plot how many prison places we had, in order to assess whether we could contain the disorder. No prime minister should be in that position.”

 ?? Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/Reuters ?? Keir and Victoria Starmer enter 10 Downing Street after the general election. The parliament­ary commission­er says there will be no investigat­ion of Lord Alli’s gifts of clothes to Victoria Starmer.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/Reuters Keir and Victoria Starmer enter 10 Downing Street after the general election. The parliament­ary commission­er says there will be no investigat­ion of Lord Alli’s gifts of clothes to Victoria Starmer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia