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Mike Ashley tells MPs to investigate collapse of Debenhams


Mike Ashley has stepped up his campaign for an investigation into the collapse of Debenhams, claiming MPs are more interested in their own PR than rooting out corporate wrongdoing.

In a two-page letter to the MP Rachel Reeves, seen by the Guardian, the Sports Direct chief executive wrote: “No one in parliament seems sufficiently interested about the Debenhams failure.” He compared this with the collapse of the Thomas Cook.

Reeves is the chair of the business, energy and industrial strategy select committee, which is investigating the failure of Britain’s oldest travel company. In his letter Ashley, contrasted the committee’s critical scrutiny of Thomas Cook with its apparent lack of interest in Debenhams.

The committee strongly criticised Thomas Cook’s management in parliament last week for failing to accept responsibility for any wrongdoing. In the letter, Ashley said he had met Reeves and other members of the committee to air concerns about Debenhams but was disappointed they were not “properly investigating”.

Ashley said: “It is very apparent that a head of steam is developing in the media and in the electorate that they will not tolerate these sorts of situations any longer where businesses and advisers profit from playing the system at the expense of others.”

He claimed politicians and regulators were only interested in their own PR and in cases such as Thomas Cook and Carillion, while ignoring “cases which are just as bad if not worse” such as Debenhams, Goals Soccer Centres and House of Fraser – all Sports Direct investments that had fared badly.

Ashley’s Sports Direct group spent about £150m on a near 30% stake in Debenhams, but was wiped out when the department store collapsed into administration in April. In the letter the Sports Direct boss highlights the losses suffered in the Debenhams collapse by small shareholders “for whom the money lost was material and life changing”.

He urged Reeves to confirm that, given its “obvious engagement” in Thomas Cook, the committee would “take immediate steps in relation to the Debenhams situation, as we had previously invited and encouraged you to do”.



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