News

Sunak probed over wife’s financial interest in childcare company

The UK parliament’s standards commissioner has opened an investigation into Prime Minister Rishi Sunak over allegations that he failed to declare a financial interest correctly.

The investigation, which became public on Monday, comes after complaints that Sunak failed when discussing increased funding for childcare to mention that his wife, Akshata Murthy, held shares in Koru Kids, a company that could benefit from the enhanced funding.

In line with normal practice, the parliamentary commissioner for standards, Daniel Greenberg, gave no details of the allegation beyond saying which section of the code it involved.

His section of the parliamentary website said the investigation was into an allegation under paragraph six of the parliamentary code. The paragraph relates to the declarations that members of parliament are required to make about any financial interests they or close family members have in an issue under discussion in parliament.

The website said the investigation was opened on Thursday April 13.

Articles You May Like

Jon Thompson to quit as HS2 chair as price of UK rail project soars
CR deal collapses, federal funding at risk
Starmer deal over Chagos Islands in turmoil after Mauritius reopens talks
Trump’s transition team seeks to pull US out of WHO ‘on day one’
Amazon workers announce strike at multiple US warehouses during busy holiday season