Home UK No appeal on post-Brexit passport deal decision

No appeal on post-Brexit passport deal decision

429
0

A UK security firm that lost out to a foreign company on a £490m Government contract to produce Britain's post-Brexit passports has said it will no longer appeal the decision.

While the announcement by Prime Minister Theresa May that Britain would change its passports from burgundy to blue after leaving the EU was greeted with excitement in some quarters, it turned to uproar when it emerged that Gemalto – a Franco-Dutch firm – had reportedly won the bid by undercutting competitors by £50m.

De La Rue, which has manufactured the passports for the past 10 years, had said it would challenge the decision, with boss Martin Sutherland challenging Theresa May and Home Secretary Amber Rudd to look workers "in the whites of the eyes" and defend the move.

Image:Britain's passports will go from burgundy to blue after Brexit

But it has now changed its mind, revealing in a post-close trading update for the last financial year that it "will not appeal against HMPO's decision on the UK passport tender".

"De La Rue will continue to fulfil its existing contract and assist with transition to the new supplier and is therefore expecting no impact on the group's performance in the next 18 months," it added.

Leading Brexiteers had condemned the snub when it was revealed last month, with Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom saying she was "very sympathetic" to criticism.

Tory MP and former international development secretary Priti Patel raged that it amounted to a "national humiliation".

Priti Patel
Image:Priti Patel was among those who criticised the decision

But the Home Office said Gemalto's bid would save taxpayers between £100m and £120m.

"The preferred bidder has been selected following a rigorous, fair and open competition and all bidders were notified of the outcome last night," a spokesman said at the time.

"The chosen company demonstrated that they will be best able to meet the needs of our passport service with a high quality and secure product at the best value for money for our customers and the taxpayer.

"It's been the case since 2009 that we do not require passports to be manufactured in the UK. A proportion of passports have been made overseas since then with up to 20 percent of blank passport books currently produced in Europe with no security or operational concerns."

More from Business

Despite the setback, De La Rue, which also makes banknotes, said in its trading update that its revenue for
the year ending 31 March had increased by about 6% year on year, with growth across all product lines.

Underlying operating profit would be in the £60m range, reflecting a write-off of about £4m related to the passport tender and delays in the shipment of some contracts in the last week of the year, it said.

Original Article

[contf]
[contfnew]

Sky News

[contfnewc]
[contfnewc]

Previous articleArmed forces ‘lacking 800 pilots and 2,400 engineers’
Next articleMan getting consensual blow job from another man said hed been sexually assaulted