Home secretary enjoyed free tickets to Taylor Swift gig where star got police escort

4 hours ago 3

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper attended Taylor Swift's concert in London for free using tickets provided to her husband by the megastar's music label Universal, Sky News can reveal.

Ms Cooper went as a guest of her husband, former Labour minister Ed Balls, who was given four tickets on 4 August, before Ms Swift's shows in Vienna were cancelled after a terror plot was foiled.

Later that month, Ms Cooper and London Mayor Sadiq Khan spoke to the Metropolitan Police to encourage them to give the megastar a "VVIP escort" through London for her Wembley Stadium concerts.

The Met were reportedly reluctant to sign it off as a blue-light escort is typically reserved for senior members of the Royal Family and high-level politicians, as it comes at huge expense to the taxpayer, The Sun reported.

The tickets were understood to be worth £170 - less than the £300 that would make it a declarable expense - but the home secretary made the declaration to the Cabinet Office earlier today.

The concert is understood to have been 16 August.

Sky News understands the Home Office department were informed as soon as the tickets were offered and the Permanent Secretary's office informed the Cabinet Office on 23 September - partly because their initial advice was that the ticket wouldn't need to be declared even via this route.

Sky News also understands the home secretary's team had been liaising with their Permanent Secretary's office about this for the last week or so.

Swift's mother Andrea, who is also her manager, apparently threatened to pull her daughter's three shows if the police convoy was not provided.

Days before, the musician was forced to axe her shows in Vienna due to a foiled suicide bomb plot targeting her Eras tour, which the US's Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) later said was intended to kill tens of thousands of people.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told Sky News on Wednesday that she "utterly rejected" there was "any kind of wrongdoing" by the Labour government or London's Labour mayor.

She said "you would expect" the home secretary and the mayor to be involved in a conversation "where there is a security risk", such as after the Vienna bomb plot.

"It's an operational matter for the police, not for the government," she told Sky News.

The minister added Ms Cooper will have made a "considered judgement about that and expressed a view".

She added: "Don't forget that when it comes to Taylor Swift, what had just happened was that a series of concerts have been cancelled in Vienna because of the very serious security threat.

"I really utterly reject that there's been any kind of wrongdoing or undue influence in this case."

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