Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Pressure grows for MPs to recall Diamond over Tucker phone call

 

Monday 09 July 2012 10:22 BST
Comments
Bob Diamond said he loved Barclays. His staff hated it...
Bob Diamond said he loved Barclays. His staff hated it...

Politicians have been virtually "useless" so far at getting to the truth behind the banking scandal, one of the MPs responsible for investigating the affair has admitted.

Andrea Leadsom, whose forensic questioning of the former chief executive of Barclays, Bob Diamond, led to his only uncomfortable moments during last week's cross-examination by the Commons Treasury Select Committee, said: "I don't think we felt we did a fantastic job. It's a fair criticism to say 'You guys were useless'.

"We had great weaknesses in that we didn't have email trails. We didn't have recordings of the morning meetings where you could point to what had been said. All we really had were the regulators' reports, what we'd seen in the media."

The frank remarks from Ms Leadsom, who worked for Barclays in the 1990s, will raise doubts about whether the larger parliamentary inquiry being set up to investigate the banking scandal will be able to uncover the whole truth. David Cameron has rejected Labour's calls for a judge-led inquiry, arguing it would take too long.

Several of the MPs who questioned Mr Diamond last week are now considering calling him back for a second bout because they are dissatisfied with his answers. Paul Tucker, the Deputy Governor of the Bank of England, pictured, will be questioned by the same committee today about the now-infamous telephone call he had with Mr Diamond at the height of the banking crisis in 2008. Any clash between his evidence and Mr Diamond's will add to the pressure for the former Barclays head to be recalled.

One of the committee members, Pat McFadden, who was a business minister under Labour, said: "I can see that happening [Mr Diamond being recalled] after we have talked to other witnesses. There were some inconsistencies in what he told us. We'll ask Tucker if his version of the phone call tallies with Bob Diamond's."

Ms Leadsom complained that she found parts of Mr Diamond's evidence "ridiculously unbelievable", while John Mann, another Labour member of the committee, said that he "may not have been entirely honest in his answers".

Tomorrow, the Treasury Select Committee will ask the outgoing Barclays chairman, Marcus Agius, about the state of mind of executives who thought it was acceptable to rig interest rates in Libor submissions.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in