Mone claimed the Cabinet Office – which was led at the time by Michael Gove – the government and the NHS “all knew about my involvement from the very beginning” before awarding her husband firm £203m in contracts.
The prime minister, Rishi Sunak, said Downing Street was taking the case “incredibly seriously” following Mone’s admission that she had lied when she denied having links to PPE Medpro, a consortium led by her husband that made millions of pounds from a deal to supply personal protective equipment (PPE) via the government “VIP lane” after she referred it to ministers in May 2020.
Mone remains a Tory peer, according to the House of Lords, despite Downing Street claiming that she had "de facto" lost the whip because she had taken a leave of absence when the scandal broke. It emerged yesterday that she was no longer a party member.
The Guardian understands that the House of Lords standards commissioner has received a further complaint about Mone's admission that she had lied to the media.
The watchdog has already launched an investigation into the affair. The row comes after Mone said in a BBC interview on Sunday that she "wasn't trying to pull the wool over anyone's eyes" and had not told the truth about her involvement to protect her family from press attention.
Guardian investigations found that Mone and her husband, Doug Barrowman, were involved with PPE Medpro, which was awarded contracts worth
Mone hits back at PM in row over PPE deals and declares: ‘They all knew’
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