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Shadow attorney general recuses himself from advising Kemi Badenoch on Ukraine
Summary
David Wolfson has recused himself from advising Kemi Badenoch on Ukraine and Russia because he is representing Roman Abramovich in a legal case; the Conservatives said other shadow ministers can provide legal advice.
Content
David Wolfson, the shadow attorney general, has recused himself from giving legal advice to Kemi Badenoch on matters relating to Ukraine and Russia. He is part of the legal team representing sanctioned oligarch Roman Abramovich in a case in the Channel Islands. Labour raised concerns at prime minister's questions about a potential conflict of interest. The Conservative campaign said Wolfson does not sit in the shadow cabinet and that other shadow ministers can supply legal advice.
Key points:
- Wolfson has recused himself from advising on Ukraine and Russia because of his role representing Roman Abramovich in a Channel Islands legal case.
- Conservatives said the recusal includes not advising on a possible deployment of UK troops, though no details of any deployment have been provided.
- Labour criticised the arrangement as a conflict of interest; Conservatives said other shadow ministers can provide legal advice and described Wolfson's work as taking a legal case rather than campaigning a cause.
Summary:
Officials say Wolfson has recused himself from Ukraine- and Russia-related advice because of his work for Abramovich, and he remains part of the Abramovich legal team in the Channel Islands. The recusal is reported to bar him from advising on matters including possible troop deployment, but no formal steps on deployment have been detailed. Undetermined at this time.
