Rishi Sunak steps in to prevent cancellation of VIP helicopter contract

Rishi Sunak steps in to prevent cancellation of VIP helicopter contract

Rishi Sunak personally intervened to stop the scrapping of a ⁤contract providing⁤ VIP ⁢helicopter​ transport for himself and senior ministers, it has emerged.

Earlier this year, Ben Wallace, the⁣ former defence secretary, ended a £40m contract for two private helicopters⁢ used by ⁤politicians ⁢and senior defence staff, which are crewed by RAF personnel and based at the Northolt airbase in west London. ​The contract was due to come to a close at ⁤the end of​ September.

Sunak ​has faced sustained criticism over his fondness for​ taking flights and helicopters‌ for ‌short trips‌ rather than cheaper, ​less​ polluting transport.

In May. the Guardian reported that Sunak took an expensive helicopter flight from ​London to Southampton for a ⁢journey that would have taken 75 minutes each ‌way ​and cost ​£30 return on public transport.

A month later, he used an RAF helicopter to ‌travel from London to Dover for a speech on small⁣ boat crossings, a journey that can be done in⁤ just over an⁣ hour on high-speed trains.

Opponents‌ said these ⁣two examples showed the prime minister had no understanding of​ “the state of public transport” in⁢ the UK.

Grant Shapps, Wallace’s successor as defence secretary,‍ then acted to stop the contract ⁣from being scrapped.‌ At the⁣ time no reason​ was⁤ offered ⁤for the change.

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A report ⁢on page ‍12 of the‌ latest edition of​ Northolt Approach, an ‍RAF in-house magazine, ⁣has‌ revealed that the reversal came following a request from ⁣the prime minister.

Tom Woods, the ‌leader of the squadron ‍that crews and looks after⁢ the⁢ helicopters, said the termination of the contract‌ “marked the end of an era in ⁣which the Royal Air Force and in particular No32 ⁣(the ​Royal) Squadron have operated the AW109 helicopter‍ in that role from RAF ‌Northolt since 2006.

“However, in⁣ mid-September 23,‌ the new ⁣SofS [secretary of state for] defence, the⁢ Rt Hon⁤ Grant Shapps, reversed the decision‌ at⁤ the request of⁣ the prime minister.”

Woods ​wrote that there was⁣ “frenetic activity … ‍to rapidly ensure all the key elements required⁤ to⁣ allow A109 to continue service were⁢ in place”.

“I’m extremely⁣ pleased and very proud to ​say​ everyone’s hard ⁣work paid off and the … capability was able to seamlessly‍ continue‍ operations through​ Sep into Oct 23​ and beyond.”

Emily Thornberry, Labour’s shadow attorney general, said she had been trying for months to establish ‍when the contract​ was extended and on⁢ whose authority.

“Since⁤ October, ⁤ministers have been refusing to give straight answers‌ to⁢ my questions in ‍parliament about why this contract was extended, how ⁣that decision was taken, and at what cost,” she said. “Now we know why.”

Thornberry has accused Sunak of having “an addiction to helicopters and private jets”.

The prime minister’s intervention to stop the scrapping of the​ contract was⁢ revealed at the weekend by the Sunday Times.

A spokesperson for ​the Ministry ​of Defence said: “All…

2023-12-17 10:25:17
Article from ‍ www.theguardian.com

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