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Boris Johnson’s legal defence fees for the probe into his role in the partygate scandal have topped £265,000, new figures have revealed.

The Cabinet Office said on Thursday the former prime minister’s legal defence totalled £265,522 – a bill it paid as Mr Johnson defended himself to the parliamentary committee.

Peters & Peters, the law firm used to provide Mr Johnson with legal advice, was handed a contract in August 2022 worth £129,000, although the Cabinet Office later estimated costs would rise to £222,000.

Follow the Politics Hub as polls close in three by-elections

The inquiry itself found Mr Johnson had lied to parliament over his role in the lockdown-breaking parties in Downing Street.

Boris Johnson, who stood down as prime minister in September 2022, also quit as an MP earlier this year ahead of the full report, triggering a by-election in Uxbridge and South Ruislip.

The Privileges Committee report recommended Mr Johnson face a 90-day suspension from the House of Commons for misleading MPs and for being complicit in a campaign to discredit the panel.

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MPs approved the report last month.

The legal costs were first reported by The Guardian.

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MPs backed partygate report

Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Angela Rayner said: “At the height of a cost of living crisis, Rishi Sunak has stood by and watched as the disgraced former prime minister milks the taxpayer to the tune of a quarter of a million pounds to prop up his partygate denials.

“This is a spineless prime minister, too weak to put a stop to this unprecedented and unacceptable waste of taxpayers’ money or force his predecessor to hand back taxpayers’ money.”

Ahead of the COVID-19 inquiry, Mr Johnson was due to handover his WhatsApp messages from his old phone, but missed the deadline due to allegedly forgetting his password to the device.

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Crypto among sectors ‘debanked’ by 9 major banks: US regulator

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Crypto among sectors ‘debanked’ by 9 major banks: US regulator

The nine largest US banks restricted financial services to politically contentious industries, including cryptocurrency, between 2020 and 2023, according to the preliminary findings of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).

The banking regulator said on Wednesday that its early findings show that major banks “made inappropriate distinctions among customers in the provision of financial services on the basis of their lawful business activities” across the three-year period.

The banks either implemented policies restricting access to banking or required escalated reviews and approvals before giving financial services to certain customers, the OCC said, without giving specific details.

The OCC initiated its review after President Donald Trump signed an executive order in August, directing a review of whether banks had debanked or discriminated against individuals based on their political or religious beliefs.

Crypto issuers and exchanges caught in restrictions

The OCC’s report found that in addition to crypto, the sectors that faced banking restrictions included oil and gas exploration, coal mining, firearms, private prisons, tobacco and e-cigarette manufacturers and adult entertainment.

Banks’ actions toward crypto included restrictions on “issuers, exchanges, or administrators, often attributed to financial crime considerations,” the OCC said.

Banking, Financial Services
Source: OCC

“It is unfortunate that the nation’s largest banks thought these harmful debanking policies were an appropriate use of their government-granted charter and market power,” said Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan Gould.

“While many of these policies were undertaken in plain sight and even announced publicly, certain banks have continued to insist that they did not engage in debanking,” he added.

The OCC examined JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citibank, Wells Fargo, US Bank, Capital One, PNC Bank, TD Bank and BMO Bank, the largest national banks it regulates.

The OCC reported that it is continuing its investigation and could refer its findings to the Justice Department.

OCC debanking report leaves “much to be desired”

Nick Anthony, a policy analyst at libertarian think tank the Cato Institute, said in an emailed statement to Cointelegraph that the OCC’s report “leaves much to be desired” and didn’t mention “the most well-known causes of debanking.”

“The report criticizes banks for severing ties with controversial clients, but it fails to mention that regulators explicitly assess banks on their reputation,” he said.

Related: ‘Grow up… We debank Democrats, we debank Republicans:’ JPMorgan CEO

“Making matters worse, the report appears to blame banks for cutting ties with cryptocurrency companies, yet makes no mention of the fact that the [Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation] explicitly told banks to stay away from these companies,” Anthony added.

Republicans on the House Finance Committee reported earlier this month that the FDIC’s so-called “pause letters” it sent to banks under the Biden administration helped to spur “the debanking of the digital asset ecosystem.”