Difference between revisions of "Jeremy Hunt"

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{{person
 
{{person
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|description=High profile Tory politician
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|constitutes=politician
 
|image=Jeremy_Hunt.jpg
 
|image=Jeremy_Hunt.jpg
 
|image_width=240px
 
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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Hunt
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Hunt
 
|spouses=Lucia Guo
 
|spouses=Lucia Guo
|alma_mater=Magdalen College, Oxford
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|alma_mater=Charterhouse School,Magdalen College (Oxford)
 
|birth_name=Jeremy Richard Streynsham Hunt
 
|birth_name=Jeremy Richard Streynsham Hunt
 
|birth_place=London, England
 
|birth_place=London, England
 
|political_parties=Conservative
 
|political_parties=Conservative
 
|children=3
 
|children=3
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|companieshouse=https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/AmqIPVzoG-_vQlrw5coEO2ekAMg/appointments
 
|employment={{job
 
|employment={{job
|title=Secretary of State for Health
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|title=Chancellor of the Exchequer
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|start=14 October 2022
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|end=5 July 2024
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|appointer=Liz Truss
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}}{{job
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|title=Chair of the Health Select Committee
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|start=29 January 2020
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|end=14 October 2022
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}}{{job
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|title=UK/Foreign Secretary
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|start=9 July 2018
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|end=24 July 2019
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}}{{job
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|title=UK/Health and Social Care Secretary
 
|start=4 September 2012
 
|start=4 September 2012
|end=
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|end=9 July 2018
 
}}{{job
 
}}{{job
 
|title=Secretary of State for Culture Olympics Media and Sport
 
|title=Secretary of State for Culture Olympics Media and Sport
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'''Jeremy Hunt''' is a British [[Conservative Party]] politician who has been the [[Secretary of State for Health]] since 2012 and the MP for South West Surrey since 2005.
+
'''Jeremy Hunt''' is a British [[Conservative Party]] politician who was appointed [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] by [[Liz Truss]] on 14 October 2022, replacing [[Kwasi Kwarteng]].
  
As Health Secretary, Hunt was responsible for negotiating a new contract for junior doctors which increased their basic pay but reduced the hours that qualify for premium pay, including reclassifying Saturday as "normal hours". Negotiations with the doctors' union, the British Medical Association (BMA), failed, resulting in multiple strikes in 2016.
+
Jeremy Hunt is the MP for [[South West Surrey]] since the 2005 General Election, when he succeeded his cousin [[Baroness Bottomley]].<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17822923 "Profile: Jeremy Hunt"]''</ref> He was [[Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs]] from July 2018 until [[Boris Johnson]] became [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] on 24 July 2019.
  
The editor of the ''British Medical Journal'' and the BMA council chair, amongst others, said that Hunt had misrepresented research to support his claim that a lack of adequate staffing in the National Health Service at weekends had led to avoidable deaths.<ref>''[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17822923 "Profile: Jeremy Hunt"]''</ref>
+
As [[Secretary of State for Health|Health Secretary]], Hunt was responsible for negotiating a new contract for junior doctors which increased their basic pay but reduced the hours that qualify for premium pay, including reclassifying Saturday as "normal hours". Negotiations with the doctors' union, the British Medical Association (BMA), failed, resulting in multiple strikes in 2016.<ref>''[http://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/689402/health-secretary-Jeremy-Hunt-sacked-Theresa-May "Jeremy Hunt clings onto Health Secretary much to doctors' chagrin"]''</ref>
  
 +
In February 2017, when Labour leader [[Jeremy Corbyn]] accused [[Theresa May]] of arranging a 'sweetheart deal' with Surrey County Council, to avoid the levying of a 15% increase in Council Tax for funding [https://www.gov.uk/government/topics/social-care social care,] Corbyn noted that the constituencies of both Jeremy Hunt and the Chancellor [[Philip Hammond]] were in Surrey, which must have influenced the special funding arrangements that had been secretly agreed.<ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/feb/08/jeremy-corbyn-accuses-may-of-sweetheart-deal-surrey-council-tax "Jeremy Corbyn accuses May of sweetheart deal with Surrey council"]''</ref>
 +
 +
He has been a critic of [[Boris Johnson]], and has been discussed as a future prime minister.<ref>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10903583/Jeremy-Hunt-defends-bombshell-demand-Boris-quit.html</ref> In June 2022, [[UK/Culture Secretary]] [[Nadine Dorries]] alleged that Hunt had urged her to follow a Chinese-style lockdown in March 2020.<ref>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61709203</ref>
 +
 +
In October 2022, he was appointed [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] by [[Liz Truss]], becoming the 'de-facto' Prime Minister.<ref>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2022/10/17/jeremy-hunt-now-de-facto-pm-says-senior-tory-mp/</ref> This marked his first return to the frontbench since [[2019]].<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/oct/14/liz-truss-appoints-jeremy-hunt-as-chancellor-after-sacking-kwarteng</ref>
 +
 +
==Education==
 +
Jeremy Hunt was born in Kennington and studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at [[Magdalen College, Oxford]], where he was president of the Oxford University Conservative Association.
 +
 
 
==Voice from the North==
 
==Voice from the North==
 
According to ''Northern Voices'' in December 2015:
 
According to ''Northern Voices'' in December 2015:
Line 55: Line 80:
  
 
===Monopoly caterer===
 
===Monopoly caterer===
During 1998-2001, Virginia Bottomley became vice-Chair of the [[British Council]], a body that is linked to the [[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]] and which promotes British cultural interests overseas. While she was at the British Council, Jeremy Hunt, became the monopoly supplier obtaining the catering contract for his company 'Hotcourses'. As the monopoly catering supplier for the British Council, Jeremy amassed the fortune that he is so proud of today.
+
During 1998-2001, [[Virginia Bottomley]] became vice-Chair of the [[British Council]], a body that is linked to the [[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]] and which promotes British cultural interests overseas. While she was at the British Council, Jeremy Hunt, became the monopoly supplier obtaining the catering contract for his company ''[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38638577 Hotcourses.]'' As the monopoly catering supplier for the British Council, Jeremy amassed the fortune that he is so proud of today.
  
 
Until her retirement from open politics, Virginia Bottomley, had been the Conservative MP for South West Surrey. In 2005, her cousin Jeremy Hunt inherited her constituency (not quite Queen's Crawley) and stepped into her shoes becoming the new MP. Virginia was then ennobled and became [[Baroness Bottomley|Baroness Bottomley of Nettlestone]]. She now lobbies on behalf of the private health sector and was a director of BUPA between 2007-2013.
 
Until her retirement from open politics, Virginia Bottomley, had been the Conservative MP for South West Surrey. In 2005, her cousin Jeremy Hunt inherited her constituency (not quite Queen's Crawley) and stepped into her shoes becoming the new MP. Virginia was then ennobled and became [[Baroness Bottomley|Baroness Bottomley of Nettlestone]]. She now lobbies on behalf of the private health sector and was a director of BUPA between 2007-2013.
Line 68: Line 93:
 
As for working like the Chinese, Jeremy Hunt failed to mention in his speech to the Tory Party that in 2010, Apple's Foxconn plants in China issued contracts forcing workers to sign a pledge stating that they would not commit suicide due to workplace stress. Another cousin, is [[Tristram Hunt]] MP, the son of Lord Hunt.<ref>''[http://northernvoicesmag.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/the-secret-of-hunts-success-hunt.html "The secret of Hunt's success"]''</ref>
 
As for working like the Chinese, Jeremy Hunt failed to mention in his speech to the Tory Party that in 2010, Apple's Foxconn plants in China issued contracts forcing workers to sign a pledge stating that they would not commit suicide due to workplace stress. Another cousin, is [[Tristram Hunt]] MP, the son of Lord Hunt.<ref>''[http://northernvoicesmag.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/the-secret-of-hunts-success-hunt.html "The secret of Hunt's success"]''</ref>
  
==Education==
+
==Party leadership bids==
Hunt was born in Kennington and studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he was president of the Oxford University Conservative Association.
+
[[File:Mark_Lucia.jpg|400px|right|thumb|Disgraced [[Mark Field]] MP embracing [[Lucia Guo|Lucia]] at the launch of her husband Jeremy's 2019 [[Conservative Party]] leadership campaign]]
 +
Jeremy Hunt announced his first bid to become the leader of the [[Conservative Party]] on 24 May 2019, following the resignation of Prime Minister [[Theresa May]]. On 20 June 2019, he was named one of the final two candidates but was defeated by [[Boris Johnson]] after securing only one third of the vote. His campaign was given £10,000 by a close associate to Saudi Arabian Crown Prince [[Mohammad bin Salman]].<ref>''[https://www.businessinsider.com/jeremy-hunt-campaign-funded-by-saudi-prince-mohammed-bin-salman-ally-2019-7?r=US&IR=T "Jeremy Hunt's bid for prime minister is being funded by a close ally of Saudi prince Mohammed Bin Salman"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
Following [[Boris Johnson]]'s election as party leader, Hunt was offered the role of [[Secretary of State for Defence]] in Johnson's Cabinet but decided to turn it down.<ref>''[https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-hunt-turn-down-job-boris-cabinet-foreign-secretary-a9019476.html "Jeremy Hunt walks out of Boris Johnson's cabinet after turning down defence post"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
When [[Boris Johnson]] announced his resignation on 7 July 2022, Jeremy Hunt said he would again stand in the subsequent [[Conservative Party]] leadership election. Hunt criticised Johnson for investing in infrastructure instead of "wealth creation", and proposed policies including a moratorium on business rates in deprived areas and a cut to corporation tax to 15% instead of a proposed rise to 25%. He also said he would retain the rise in National Insurance rates and would not cut personal taxation until he "[got] the economy growing". Hunt said [[Esther McVey]] would be deputy prime minister if he were to become Prime Minister. He was eliminated in the first round of voting on 13 July 2022, receiving 18 votes. He endorsed [[Rishi Sunak]] after being eliminated.<ref>''[https://news.sky.com/story/conservative-leadership-race-jeremy-hunt-backs-rishi-sunak-after-being-knocked-out-of-contest-12651366 "Conservative leadership race: Jeremy Hunt backs Rishi Sunak after being knocked out of contest"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
Jeremy Hunt declined to bid for the party leadership a third time, upon the announced resignation of [[Liz Truss]] on 20 October 2022.<ref>''[https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-20/uk-chancellor-jeremy-hunt-won-t-stand-for-conservative-leader "UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt Won’t Stand for Conservative Leader"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Provoking disgust==
 +
On 11 April 2019, as [[Foreign Secretary]], Jeremy Hunt made a statement about the arrest of [[Julian Assange]] at the [[Ecuador]]ian embassy:{{QB|“No one is above the law. [[Julian Assange]] is no hero. He has hidden from the truth for years and years and it is right that his future should be decided in the British judicial system.
 +
 
 +
"What has happened today is the result of years of careful diplomacy by the foreign office and I commend particularly our ambassador in [[Ecuador]], and [[Alan Duncan]] and his team here in London for their work but also the very courageous decision by [[President Moreno]] in Ecuador to resolve the situation that has been going on for nearly seven years.
 +
 
 +
"I mean it’s not so much [[Julian Assange]] being held hostage in the [[Ecuador]]ian Embassy, it’s actually [[Julian Assange]] holding the [[Ecuador]]ian embassy hostage in a situation that was absolutely intolerable for them so this will now be decided properly, independently by the British legal system respected throughout the world for its independence and integrity and that is the right outcome.”}}
 +
According to a report by ''The Indicter'' in December 2021:
 +
:There are no specific facts in Hunt’s statement regarding any charges, crimes or convictions. His comments “no hero” “hidden from the truth” “holding the [[Ecuador]]ian embassy hostage” “absolutely intolerable” are speculative opinion.
 +
 
 +
:Jeremy Hunt's statement is designed to provoke disgust.<ref>''[https://theindicter.com/new-foi-responses-confirm-the-british-governments-media-campaign-against-julian-assange/ "New FOI responses confirm the British government’s media campaign against Julian Assange"]''</ref>
 +
 
 +
==Undeclared interest==
 +
In 2018, a complaint was lodged with the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner alleging that Jeremy Hunt had failed to declare his 50 per cent stake in a luxury property firm, [https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/10970413/officers Mare Pond Properties Ltd.] A spokeswoman for Mr Hunt said:{{QB|“These were honest administrative mistakes which have already been rectified.”<ref>''[https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/6049940/jeremy-hunt-faces-probe-after-braking-strict-rules-against-money-laundering/ "Jeremy Hunt faces probe after ‘breaking’ strict rules against money-laundering"]''</ref><ref>''[https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/apr/13/jeremy-hunt-referred-to-parliamentary-standards-over-luxury-flats-error "Jeremy Hunt referred to MPs' standards watchdog over luxury flats error"]''</ref>}}
 +
 
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Latest revision as of 12:32, 11 July 2024

Person.png Jeremy Hunt   Companies House Powerbase SourcewatchRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician)
Jeremy Hunt.jpg
BornJeremy Richard Streynsham Hunt
1 November 1966
London, England
Alma materCharterhouse School, Magdalen College (Oxford)
Children3
SpouseLucia Guo
Founder ofHotcourses
Member ofPaley Media Council
Interest ofJohn Lewis
PartyConservative
High profile Tory politician

Employment.png Chancellor of the Exchequer Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
14 October 2022 - 5 July 2024
Appointed byLiz Truss
Preceded byKwasi Kwarteng
Succeeded byRachel Reeves

Employment.png Chair of the Health Select Committee

In office
29 January 2020 - 14 October 2022

Employment.png UK/Foreign Secretary Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
9 July 2018 - 24 July 2019
Preceded byBoris Johnson
Succeeded byDominic Raab

Employment.png UK/Health and Social Care Secretary

In office
4 September 2012 - 9 July 2018
Preceded byAndrew Lansley
Succeeded byMatt Hancock

Employment.png Shadow Minister for the Olympics

In office
2 July 2007 - 11 May 2010
Succeeded byTessa Jowell

Employment.png Shadow Minister for Disabled People

In office
6 December 2005 - 2 July 2007

Jeremy Hunt is a British Conservative Party politician who was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer by Liz Truss on 14 October 2022, replacing Kwasi Kwarteng.

Jeremy Hunt is the MP for South West Surrey since the 2005 General Election, when he succeeded his cousin Baroness Bottomley.[1] He was Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs from July 2018 until Boris Johnson became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on 24 July 2019.

As Health Secretary, Hunt was responsible for negotiating a new contract for junior doctors which increased their basic pay but reduced the hours that qualify for premium pay, including reclassifying Saturday as "normal hours". Negotiations with the doctors' union, the British Medical Association (BMA), failed, resulting in multiple strikes in 2016.[2]

In February 2017, when Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn accused Theresa May of arranging a 'sweetheart deal' with Surrey County Council, to avoid the levying of a 15% increase in Council Tax for funding social care, Corbyn noted that the constituencies of both Jeremy Hunt and the Chancellor Philip Hammond were in Surrey, which must have influenced the special funding arrangements that had been secretly agreed.[3]

He has been a critic of Boris Johnson, and has been discussed as a future prime minister.[4] In June 2022, UK/Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries alleged that Hunt had urged her to follow a Chinese-style lockdown in March 2020.[5]

In October 2022, he was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer by Liz Truss, becoming the 'de-facto' Prime Minister.[6] This marked his first return to the frontbench since 2019.[7]

Education

Jeremy Hunt was born in Kennington and studied Philosophy, Politics, and Economics at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he was president of the Oxford University Conservative Association.

Voice from the North

According to Northern Voices in December 2015:

"I doubt there is anything that is more guaranteed to get the backs up of English workers than hearing some upper middle-class Tory bastard telling them that they need to work harder.

"Earlier this year at the Tory Party conference in Manchester, the multi-millionaire Health Secretary, Jeremy Richard Streynsham Hunt, claimed in a conference speech that low-paid workers lacked dignity and self respect and ought to graft like the Chinese 'Who put in punishing hours' in a sweatshop. Needless to say, having been born into a life of privilege, this former head boy of Charterhouse and student of Magdalen College Oxford, would know all about hard graft.

"Jeremy Hunt's own career and advancement in life, is something that seems to have been shrouded in mystery. At the Tory Party conference, Hunt claimed that his father "worked as a manager" for the NHS. Given that his father, Sir Nicholas John Streynsham Hunt, was Admiral of the Fleet in his main career, this is something of an exaggeration. After retirement, Sir Nicholas like a lot of well-connected establishment figures, became a 'quangoista', joining various hospital boards. He then became Chairman of the South West Surrey District Health Authority during 1990 to 1995 and then Chairman of Nuffield Hospitals from 1996 to 2001. For most of this time, his niece, Virginia Bottomley, was the Secretary of State for Health in a Conservative government.

Monopoly caterer

During 1998-2001, Virginia Bottomley became vice-Chair of the British Council, a body that is linked to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and which promotes British cultural interests overseas. While she was at the British Council, Jeremy Hunt, became the monopoly supplier obtaining the catering contract for his company Hotcourses. As the monopoly catering supplier for the British Council, Jeremy amassed the fortune that he is so proud of today.

Until her retirement from open politics, Virginia Bottomley, had been the Conservative MP for South West Surrey. In 2005, her cousin Jeremy Hunt inherited her constituency (not quite Queen's Crawley) and stepped into her shoes becoming the new MP. Virginia was then ennobled and became Baroness Bottomley of Nettlestone. She now lobbies on behalf of the private health sector and was a director of BUPA between 2007-2013.

Media Minister

After being elected to Parliament, Jeremy was appointed Minister for Media and Culture and was put in charge of adjudicating the News Corp bid for BSkyB. Jeremy had previously partnered News Corp in his educational supplies business. After being an MP for just seven years, Jeremy Hunt became Secretary of State for Health, a position that had been previously held by his cousin Virginia Bottomley.

Although he owes much of his success in life to the social class that he was born into and his social connections, the Prime Minister, David Cameron, says that it's not where you come from that really matters but where you are going. But career progress of this type, "the leg up", or some would say 'nepotism,' is something that is admired by Cameron in spite of his assertions about merit. Cameron's only job outside of politics, was when he worked for Carlton TV, a job he got by being given a leg up by his mother-in-law, Lady Annabel Astor.

We do not mean to throw any odious imputation upon the general character of either Virginia Bottomley or Jeremy Hunt, nor do we suggest that they have acted in any way illegally. However, it is intriguing how both their lives and careers have been so closely intertwined as Jeremy as followed in the footsteps of his older cousin in becoming Health Secretary and in inheriting her Surrey constituency. Nor should we be surprised at the antics of a nepotistic English ruling elite, the Tory Party, who work to defend established privilege and work for anyone with money or power.

As for working like the Chinese, Jeremy Hunt failed to mention in his speech to the Tory Party that in 2010, Apple's Foxconn plants in China issued contracts forcing workers to sign a pledge stating that they would not commit suicide due to workplace stress. Another cousin, is Tristram Hunt MP, the son of Lord Hunt.[8]

Party leadership bids

Disgraced Mark Field MP embracing Lucia at the launch of her husband Jeremy's 2019 Conservative Party leadership campaign

Jeremy Hunt announced his first bid to become the leader of the Conservative Party on 24 May 2019, following the resignation of Prime Minister Theresa May. On 20 June 2019, he was named one of the final two candidates but was defeated by Boris Johnson after securing only one third of the vote. His campaign was given £10,000 by a close associate to Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.[9]

Following Boris Johnson's election as party leader, Hunt was offered the role of Secretary of State for Defence in Johnson's Cabinet but decided to turn it down.[10]

When Boris Johnson announced his resignation on 7 July 2022, Jeremy Hunt said he would again stand in the subsequent Conservative Party leadership election. Hunt criticised Johnson for investing in infrastructure instead of "wealth creation", and proposed policies including a moratorium on business rates in deprived areas and a cut to corporation tax to 15% instead of a proposed rise to 25%. He also said he would retain the rise in National Insurance rates and would not cut personal taxation until he "[got] the economy growing". Hunt said Esther McVey would be deputy prime minister if he were to become Prime Minister. He was eliminated in the first round of voting on 13 July 2022, receiving 18 votes. He endorsed Rishi Sunak after being eliminated.[11]

Jeremy Hunt declined to bid for the party leadership a third time, upon the announced resignation of Liz Truss on 20 October 2022.[12]

Provoking disgust

On 11 April 2019, as Foreign Secretary, Jeremy Hunt made a statement about the arrest of Julian Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy:

“No one is above the law. Julian Assange is no hero. He has hidden from the truth for years and years and it is right that his future should be decided in the British judicial system.

"What has happened today is the result of years of careful diplomacy by the foreign office and I commend particularly our ambassador in Ecuador, and Alan Duncan and his team here in London for their work but also the very courageous decision by President Moreno in Ecuador to resolve the situation that has been going on for nearly seven years.

"I mean it’s not so much Julian Assange being held hostage in the Ecuadorian Embassy, it’s actually Julian Assange holding the Ecuadorian embassy hostage in a situation that was absolutely intolerable for them so this will now be decided properly, independently by the British legal system respected throughout the world for its independence and integrity and that is the right outcome.”

According to a report by The Indicter in December 2021:

There are no specific facts in Hunt’s statement regarding any charges, crimes or convictions. His comments “no hero” “hidden from the truth” “holding the Ecuadorian embassy hostage” “absolutely intolerable” are speculative opinion.
Jeremy Hunt's statement is designed to provoke disgust.[13]

Undeclared interest

In 2018, a complaint was lodged with the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner alleging that Jeremy Hunt had failed to declare his 50 per cent stake in a luxury property firm, Mare Pond Properties Ltd. A spokeswoman for Mr Hunt said:

“These were honest administrative mistakes which have already been rectified.”[14][15]


 

Event Participated in

EventLocation(s)Description
UK/Parliament/Voted YES to vaccine passports in 2021UK/House of CommonsThese members of the UK Parliament voted YES to the introduction of a "vaccine" passport in 2021

 

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References