David Questions Baroness Ashton

December 2, 2009

Facing the European Parliament for the first time since her appointment as the EU’s “High Representative”, Baroness Ashton faced questioning from David Campbell Bannerman MEP over donations to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament’s during her tenure as treasurer. The BBC reports

Baroness Ashton was asked about her role in fundraising for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament when she was its treasurer in the early 1980s.UKIP MEP David Campbell Bannerman said an audit of CND’s accounts in 1983 had found nearly 40% of its funds could not be traced to their original donors and it declined to say where the money came from.He asked Baroness Ashton to confirm she had never accepted money from client states of the Soviet Union, the Communist Party of Great Britain or other communist sympathisers, saying EU states who had suffered under communist rule deserved a “clear answer”.Baroness Ashton said she had ordered the first-ever audit of CND’s accounts during her time there.”I did not take any direct money from any communist country,” she said.

The Earth Times also reports on the questioning

Finally, she denied taking payments from Communist regimes when she was CND’s treasurer in the early 1980s, following a question from British eurosceptic MEP David Campbell Bannerman.”I did not take any direct money from any Communist country,” she said.

The Financial Times also picked up on David’s questioning

Her riskiest moment came when David Campbell-Bannerman of Britain’s anti-European UK Independence party asked her if, as treasurer of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament movement in the early 1980s, she had ever accepted funds directly or indirectly from Soviet bloc countries and entities or the British Communist party.Lady Ashton replied: “I did not take any direct money from any communist country … CND was an organisation that democratically marched for what it believed in … Money was collected in buckets. If I can’t tell you where all the money in buckets came from, I hope you won’t be surprised.”Lady Ashton’s involvement with CND has attracted criticism from politicians in central and eastern European countries once under Soviet domination. But José Manuel Barroso, European Commission president, is adamant that her political opinions of more than 25 years ago should not disbar her from running EU foreign policy.

More in the Telegraph.

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