IoS exclusive: Coulson owned News Corp shares while at No 10

Revelation raises key questions for inquiry: did Cameron know, and, if not, why not?

Andy Coulson held shares in News Corporation while he was David Cameron's head of communications at Downing Street, at a time when the Government was deciding whether to approve the company's takeover of BSkyB, it is revealed today.

Mr Coulson, who faces a tough time when he gives evidence to the Leveson inquiry this Thursday, was awarded the blue-chip shares as part of his pay-off when he resigned as editor of the News of the World over the phone-hacking scandal in 2007.

The revelation raises difficult questions for the Prime Minister over whether he knew about Mr Coulson's financial interests.

Crucially, Mr Coulson was in possession of the shares when he was among those advising Mr Cameron over the PM's decision to hand responsibility for News Corp's bid to take over BSkyB to Jeremy Hunt in December 2010, The Independent on Sunday has learnt.

Mr Coulson's shareholding means that he stood to gain financially from News Corp's planned takeover of the digital broadcaster, because Rupert Murdoch's company would have seen its stock soar. In the end, Mr Murdoch withdrew the bid in July 2011 when the company was grappling with the fallout from the revelation that the News of the World had hacked Milly Dowler's phone.

It is not known whether Mr Coulson declared the potential conflict of interest to the then Cabinet Secretary, Gus O'Donnell, or whether the matter arose when he was appointed communications chief, first by the Conservative Party in 2007, and in May 2010 when he started work at No 10.

Mr Cameron and George Osborne, who was central to the hiring of Mr Coulson, have already been criticised for failing to carry out sufficient checks on what the former editor knew about hacking.

But the fresh disclosure about Mr Coulson's shares will put further pressure on Mr Cameron over whether he carried out "due diligence" in appointing Mr Coulson in May 2007. Questions for the Prime Minister include whether he, as a former executive for Carlton, a major media company, should have asked Mr Coulson whether he had been given any shares as part of his severance package from News International. Mr Coulson's pay-off from the media company also included severance payments which were staggered over time and continued when he began working for Mr Cameron. News International sources indicated the compensation package was "generous".

Mr Coulson was subject to a type of vetting before starting work for the Tories and again before he entered No 10, but this would not have picked up on financial interests. Mr Coulson resigned as Mr Cameron's director of communications in January 2011.

The shareholding could be picked up by Lord Leveson this Thursday.

All special advisers are classed as civil servants under the Civil Service code, which states that conflicts of interest must be declared to senior management. Civil servants must declare "to their department or agency any business interests... shares or other securities which they or members of their immediate family [hold]... which they would be able to further as a result of their official position".

No comment was available from No 10 or Mr Coulson.

Top stories
News in pictures
World news in pictures
UK news in pictures
UK news in pictures
More stories
       
Independent
Travel Shop
India and Shimla
14 nights from only £1899pp Find out more
Prague city break
Three nights from £199pp Find out more
4* Soreda hotel break, Malta
Seven nights all-inclusive from £399pp Find out more
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

iJobs Job Widget
iJobs General

Goods Receiving Technician

Negotiable: Progressive Recruitment: Quality Inspector - West Midlands - 3 Mon...

Reception Teacher

£21000 - £36000 per annum: Capita Education Resourcing Permanent Team: Looking...

KS1 Teacher

£120 per day: Randstad Education Luton: KS1 Teacher required to cover PPA in a...

KS2 Teacher Maternity Contract - September Start - Bromley

MPS + OLA: Randstad Education London: Randstad Education are working with a Cl...

Day In a Page

'There is a battle going on inside us that is never discussed'

Masculinity in crisis?

'There is a battle going on inside us that is never discussed'
Have US shock jocks gone too far?

Have US shock jocks gone too far?

An incendiary remark from Rush Limbaugh may be the beginning of the end for outspoken right-wing US broadcasters
The ‘Beverly Hills’ of Surrey pays more income tax than big cities of the North

The ‘Beverly Hills’ of Surrey

Elmbridge pays more income tax than big cities of the North
Heavenly Bodies

Heavenly Bodies

Michael Landy's artistic marriage made in heaven... and hell
'He will always be a friend': Jackie Stewart backs Polanski

'He will always be a friend'

Jackie Stewart backs Roman Polanski
The price of pacifism: Refusing to go to war is finally being recognised as a brave act

The price of pacifism

From the Second World War refusenik to the 19-year-old Israeli, Holly Williams talks to five people who risked shame and suffering to take a stand as conscientious objector.
'It was mass hysteria': Jason Isaacs on groupies, theatre bores and snogging James Bond

Jason Isaacs: Groupies, theatre bores and James Bond

To millions, Jason Isaacs is one of Harry Potter's arch enemies – but his wife prefers him as a Scottish TV detective.
Notes from a small island: Is Sealand an independent 'micronation' or an illegal fortress?

Sealand: 'Micronation' or illegal fortress?

Thomas Hodgkinson spent a week at the tiny platform off the Suffolk coast to find out.
Not a bad bone: Mark Hix cooks with cutlets and ribs

Mark Hix cooks with cutlets and ribs

If you ignore cutlets and ribs, you'll risk missing out on some delicious and easy meals, says our chef.
The experts' guide to summer: From getting fit for the beach to recreating that Olympic buzz

The experts' guide to summer

From getting fit for the beach to recreating that Olympic buzz
Sex, drugs and fast cars: The legend of James Hunt has set Hollywood hearts racing

Legend of James Hunt has set Hollywood hearts racing

Early glimpses of Ron Howard's film Rush suggest it will portray Hunt as a high-living lothario, with an insatiable appetite for partying.
Macklemore: 'I don't have moderation when using drugs and alcohol. It was hurting my life'

Macklemore: 'I don't have moderation'

The next Vanilla Ice or the next Eminem? Macklemore doesn't have a record contract – but he does have the UK's biggest-selling single of the year.
Don't be shy: Bill Granger's Sri Lankan recipes

Don't be shy: Bill Granger's Sri Lankan recipes

Sri Lankan cuisine is light, sunny, wonderfully spiced – and so easy to cook from scratch. Just as soon as you've broken into the coconut, that is.
Sir James Dyson’s latest project: Cleaning up hospitals

Sir James Dyson’s latest project: Cleaning up hospitals

Doctors are hailing the revamp of a Bath neonatal unit, where babies sleep more and feed better, as the model for patient care
One man returns to Argentina's town that drowned

One man returns to Argentina's town that drowned

Epecuen was submerged under 10 metres of water in 1985. Now the floods have gone – and 83-year-old Pablo Novak has moved back in