Richard Benyon

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Richard Benyon has been the Conservative MP for Newbury since 2005. He has been the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Natural Environment and Fisheries) at the Department for Environment since 2010.[1]

Background

Benyon is the son of Sir William Benyon, himself a former Conservative MP. He is a great-great-grandson of the 19th Century Conservative Prime Minister Lord Salisbury.[2]

He is a former officer in the Royal Green Jackets.[3]

EU Farm subsidy controversy

Benyon was criticised in February 2011 because his department refused to release information about EU subsidy payments to farmers, while his family were benefitting from the payments. The Mail reported:

According to farmsubsidy.org, a freedom of information campaign group which continues to publish the list of EU subsidy recipients in the face of the Government blackout, the Benyon estates received more than £2 million in aid between 1999 and 2009.
Mr Benyon has declared his family business in the Commons register of interests. But under the information blackout, it is not possible to know how much his family estates received last year from the EU.

Mr Benyon resigned his chairmanship of the family business, Englefield Estate Trust Corporation Limited, when he became a Minister last year. In the members’ register he says he remains ‘the trustee of various family trusts in all of which either I or members of my wider family have beneficial interests’..[4]

Notes

  1. Richard Benyon, parliament.uk, accessed 29 April 2011.
  2. Robert Verkaik, Wealthy minister earns £2m in EU farm subsidies which his department tried to cover up, Mail Online, 27 February 2011.
  3. Robert Verkaik, Wealthy minister earns £2m in EU farm subsidies which his department tried to cover up, Mail Online, 27 February 2011.
  4. Robert Verkaik, Wealthy minister earns £2m in EU farm subsidies which his department tried to cover up, Mail Online, 27 February 2011.