Famed optician-dodger Dominic Cummings looks set to make news again on Monday, as his relationship to a company awarded hundreds of thousands of pounds of government money during the coronavirus pandemic comes under a legal microscope.
A crowd-funded group of lawyers has succeeded in forcing a judicial review into a “handshake deal” between the Conservatives and a company run by a husband and wife with a long history of working either for the Conservatives, or closely with senior members of the party.
“It is incredibly important that we can trust that government is spending our money properly and responsibly,” says Gemma Abbott, one of the lawyers behind the case.
“And when it comes to procurement it’s not just awarding contracts on a handshake to their mates.”
So what’s it all about? Let’s begin with…
The company
The company at the centre of the case is Public First, a polling company founded by husband and wife James Frayne and Rachel Wolf in 2016.
According to its website, it helps organisations “understand and influence public opinion through research and targeted communications campaigns”.
The contract
On March 3 last year, as the government was slowly gearing up to deal with the increasing threat of coronavirus, it struck a deal with Public First and paid £253,000 for services between March and May 2020.
The value of the deal was capped at £840,000 and the company billed the government for £550,000.
The controversy (part 1)
What’s notable about the contract is… there was, initially, no contract. It was a handshake deal that was only formalised in a retrospective contract on June 5.
In addition, there was no callout by the government for the services Public First would provide under the deal, so the normal rules that ensure all companies that want to can apply for a contract were bypassed.
Legislation was passed when the pandemic hit to ensure crucial supplies and services such as PPE could be procured by the government quicker.
Known as Regulation 32 powers, the new laws meant government and other public authorities do not have to go out to competitive tender due to the need to appoint suppliers with “extreme urgency”.
A Cabinet Office spokesperson told HuffPost UK: “In response to an unprecedented global pandemic the government acted quickly to ensure we quickly understood public attitudes and behaviours.
“This valuable work helped to improve vitally important public health messages, better inform the public and reach audiences.”
The controversy (part 2)
Back to the husband and wife who founded Public First.
Rachel Wolf
According to Public First’s website, Rachel Wolf “began her career as an education and political adviser to the Conservative Party”, “was a policy adviser to Boris Johnson on his first mayoral campaign” and “co-authored the Conservative Party’s Election Manifesto in 2019”.
James Frayne
James Frayne “spent his entire career working in communications and opinion research” and, according to a piece he wrote for the Daily Mail in September last year, he “worked at the Department of Education, alongside Dominic Cummings under Michael Gove”.
In 2004 he worked with Cummings to set up a campaign against the formation of a regional assembly in the north-east, which Cummings later described as as “a training exercise for an EU referendum”.
As you may have noticed, there is a bit of a theme here, though Frayne has distanced himself and Wolf from Cummings and another of Boris Johnson’s former advisors, Lee Cain.
In a statement, he told HuffPost UK: “I’ve had no contact of any description with Dominic Cummings for nearly five years and have met Lee Cain twice in my life, neither time to talk Covid.
“Rachel Wolf doesn’t do opinion research and therefore didn’t speak to anyone about Covid research.”
Monday’s judicial review is being brought by The Good Law Project (GLP), a not-for-profit, crowdfunded group that scrutinises and in some cases launches legal cases into the legality of government business and conduct.
Gemma Abbott, legal director at the Good Law Project, told HuffPost UK the contract is “really problematic”.
“The government had given a very lucrative public affairs contract without any competition or tendering process,” she added.
“They directly awarded this contract to a firm that is run people with very close links to the Conservative Party and, in particular, very close links to Dominic Cummings and Michael Gove.
“We think that this arrangement – money for their mates, on a handshake and formalised later – was unlawful.”