By Ben Kerrigan-
Michael Gove has been accused of deceiving the British public by falsely claiming all personal protective equipment (PPE) contracts for the NHS went through eight steps of vetting, as it emerged this did not happen with a deal for millions of unusable face masks linked to a Conservative adviser.
Angela Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader has accused Mr. Gove and other ministers were “apparently lying to the public and lying to parliament” by claiming that “every single procurement decision went through an eight-stage process”.
The allegation comes just weeks after Matt Hancock was accused of lying to the British public and then later forced to step down after he was caught breaking coronavirus rules by kissing his close aid, Gina Colandangelo. Dominic Cummings- the Downing Street adviser- who decided to leak inside information to discredit the government said Michael Gove was expressed by prime minister Boris Johnson as the preferred man to be Health Secretary at a time when he felt Matt Hancock was doing a hopeless job.
Cummings accused the government of being dishonest with the British public, his discrediting of Matt Hancock, eventually proven true, following the hypocrisy that led to his exit from government.
Now, the Guardian has reported that the required eight-step process was not undertaken in the case of Ayanda Capital, which was awarded £252m of deals for PPE supplies in spring 2020, raises valid questions. Face masks provided by Ayanda were apparently unusable because the Department of Health and Social Care had specified masks with ear loops, despite the NHS requiring masks that looped over the head.
The process was allegedly not followed in the case of PestFix, a pest control supplies company with net assets of £18,000 that was awarded a contract to supply PPE worth £350m to the NHS, some of which also did not meet the health service’s technical standards.
Rayner said:
“Why have Michael Gove and government ministers apparently been lying to the public and lying to parliament to try to cover this up? Michael Gove needs to explain why he has not been telling the truth.
“We need a fully independent investigation into the Tories’ VIP fast track for PPE and testing contracts to get to the bottom of who got the contracts, how they got them and what connections they have to Conservative ministers and the Conservative party.”
The government is defending the judicial review over the PPE contracts, arguing the VIP route and the contracts awarded, including to PestFix, Ayanda and another company, were lawful and reasonable as the government tried to rapidly meet a serious shortfall of PPE at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Internal documents released as part of a judicial review case revealed in May that Ayanda, a “family office” finance house in London, was awarded two PPE contracts for a total of £252m after being referred to the VIP lane for assessing deals because its representative, Andrew Mills, was an adviser to Liz Truss, the trade secretary.
Officials pushed for the contracts to be processed as quickly as possible, with one marking emails “URGENT VIP CASE” and “VERY URGENT VIP ESCALATION”, saying that if the deal did not happen: “Andrew will escalate as high as he can possibly go!”
The two contracts were approved on 30 April 2020, five days after Ayanda was put into the VIP lane, but before required financial checks had been carried out on the company, despite a Cabinet Office official raising “major issues or concerns” because of inadequate availability of public financial information and a “low” credit score.
Ayanda has consistently said it fulfilled the contract according to the specifications it was given.
Rayner, who is the shadow chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, Gove’s opposite number, said:
“Why have Michael Gove and government ministers apparently been lying to the public and lying to parliament to try to cover this up? Michael Gove needs to explain why he has not been telling the truth.
“We need a fully independent investigation into the Tories’ VIP fast track for PPE and testing contracts to get to the bottom of who got the contracts, how they got them and what connections they have to Conservative ministers and the Conservative party.”
A National Audit Office report in November said 144 referrals to the VIP lane had come from ministers’ private offices, but said of its investigation: “Ministers had properly declared their interests, and we found no evidence of their involvement in procurement decisions or contract management.”