House of Lords, Lobbying, Labour, Politics, UK news, Cryptocurrencies Business | The Guardian
Questions over whether Iain McNicol was within lobbying rules when he wrote to civil servants about company that was paying for his adviceTories fight abolition of hereditary peers as Labour’s Lords reforms stallCalls for Labour peer to be investigated over cash-for-access claimsA Labour peer who served on Keir Starmer’s frontbench wrote to the Treasury on behalf of a cryptocurrency firm that was paying him as an adviser, raising questions about whether this was within the rules.Iain McNicol, 55, advised the Dubai- and Zurich-based Astra Protocol, a tech startup that launched a cryptocurrency token, which has plunged in value by 99.7% since its peak. Continue reading…
Questions over whether Iain McNicol was within lobbying rules when he wrote to civil servants about company that was paying for his advice
- Tories fight abolition of hereditary peers as Labour’s Lords reforms stall
- Calls for Labour peer to be investigated over cash-for-access claims
A Labour peer who served on Keir Starmer’s frontbench wrote to the Treasury on behalf of a cryptocurrency firm that was paying him as an adviser, raising questions about whether this was within the rules.
Iain McNicol, 55, advised the Dubai- and Zurich-based Astra Protocol, a tech startup that launched a cryptocurrency token, which has plunged in value by 99.7% since its peak.