Robert Jenrick urged to release documents in planning row

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Westferry RoadImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The development would have built 1,500 new homes on Westferry Road, the Isle of Dogs

Labour has urged Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick to publish all correspondence relating to his approval of a £1bn property scheme.

The call came after it emerged the developer of the scheme has since given money to the Conservative Party.

Richard Desmond donated £12,000 to the party two weeks after Mr Jenrick gave planning permission for his company to build 1,500 homes in east London.

The Conservatives said policies were "in no way influenced by donations".

Labour has criticised Mr Jenrick for "refusing" to answer an Urgent Question in the House of Commons on the matter.

Chris Pincher - a junior housing minister - is answering the question instead.

Sources close to Mr Jenrick say he will be taking MPs' questions on Monday, at his regular Commons question time.

Mr Jenrick granted planning permission on 14 January for Mr Desmond's company Northern & Shell to build on the Westferry Printworks site on the Isle of Dogs.

It has emerged that Mr Desmond made a personal donation to the Conservatives on 28 January.

Labour said Mr Jenrick must show the process was "fair and transparent" and a local councillor said the donation "raised questions" for the minister.

'Apparent bias'

The property development was approved the day before the introduction of a new council community levy which would have meant the company paying an additional £40m.

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Mr Jenrick has insisted he did not show any bias

In giving the project the green light, Mr Jenrick overruled the government's planning inspectorate whch said the development needed to deliver more affordable housing in London's poorest borough.

The council has since challenged the decision, forcing the secretary of state to back down and to admit what he did was "unlawful by reason of apparent bias".

Local councillors asked the High Court last month to order the government to disclose emails and memos around the deal.

Rather than doing this, Mr Jenrick's lawyers conceded the timing of his decision "would lead the fair-minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility" that he had been biased.

Conservative fundraiser

The £12,000 figure was included in Tuesday's Electoral Commission audit of party donations, external for the first three months of the year and first reported by the Daily Mail, external.

Mr Jenrick has come under growing political pressure in recent weeks after it emerged he sat at the same table as Mr Desmond, the former owner of the Daily Express, at a Conservative Party fundraiser last November.

A spokesman for Mr Jenrick told the Daily Mail "the developers did raise their application, but Mr Jenrick informed them that it would not be appropriate for them to discuss the matter with him, or for him to pass comment on it".

But Labour said Mr Jenrick must now make clear whether he told officials at his department about the meeting and disclose whether he or members of his team had any other contacts with the developer.

'Terrible optics'

Unless the Housing Secretary published all documents about the application and any correspondence with Mr Desmond in the run-up to the decision, the opposition said "the public will be entitled to think it's one rule for the Conservatives and their wealthy friends, and another rule for everyone else".

Image caption,

Mr Desmond is one of the UK's most high-profile businessmen

"Communities must have confidence that the planning process is fair and transparent, but the unanswered questions around Robert Jenrick's unlawful decision have weakened that trust," said Labour's shadow communities secretary Steve Reed.

"It's time for Mr Jenrick to come clean and answer these crucial questions about why he over-ruled his own inspector to grant planning permission for a billionaire Conservative Party donor to build a luxury development."

Andrew Wood, who resigned as leader of the Conservative group on Tower Hamlets Council because of his concerns over the property deal, has called for the Cabinet Office to launch an investigation.

He told the BBC details of Mr Desmond's donation raised "more questions about what was going on", adding that although £12,000 was "not a lot of money," it did not look good.

"The optics are terrible," he added.

A Conservative Party spokesperson said Mr Desmond's donation was properly declared to the Electoral Commission and fully complied with the law.

"Government policy is in no way influenced by party donations - they are entirely separate," the spokesperson said.

Mr Jenrick has insisted there was no actual bias towards Mr Desmond but said it was right for the decision to be revisited to "ensure there was complete fairness".

A spokesman for the Department of Housing, Communities and Local Government said that while "we reject the suggestion there was any actual bias in the decision, we have agreed that the application will be re-determined."

Mr Desmond has, in the past, donated money to both Labour and UKIP.

Northern & Shell, of which he is the majority shareholder, sold its publishing interests in 2018 and now focuses largely on property development as well as digital ventures and the Health Lottery.

Former Labour Transport Secretary Lord Adonis has written to the Cabinet Secretary about the matter.

Writing on Twitter, Lord Adonis said he would raise Mr Jenrick's "failure to answer parliamentary questions about his conduct" in the House of Lords.