
Musicals millionaire composer, Andrew Lloyd Webber, flew in from New York for the opening night of his eternally running musical, Cats.
The successful producer wasted no time in also attending a House of Lords’ voting session. The Tory life peer unsuccessfully voted in favour of the government’s plan to cut tax credits for the nation’s poor. The mega rich impresario is reported to have flown nearly 3,500 miles to help out his fellow Tory peers impose austerity on Britain’s hard working poor families and to diminish the value of the Upper House.

BYPASS THE CENSORS
Sign up to get unfiltered news delivered straight to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe any time. By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Use
The International Business Times reports:
Webber, who is estimated to be worth around £650m ($996m) was found to have voted against Baroness Hollis’s motion to delay the Bill, which could leave as many as three million lower income families worse-off by an average of £1,300 in the short term for a further three years.
The Phantom Of The Opera and Cats composer is said to have been drafted in by fellow Tory peers as part of a bid to stop a potentially embarrassing defeat in the House of Lords for Chancellor George Osborne.
However, the journey for Webber, who was made a life peer in 1997, proved to be wasted after fellow peers voted 307 to 277 in favour of delaying the cuts, as well as a second Labour motion to delay the cuts until a “full transitional protection” for those affected can be drawn up by 289 to 272.
The last time Webber voted in the House of Lords was to back gay marriage in 2013. According to The Public Whip, he has voted in motions just 30 times out of a possible 1,898 times since becoming a peer 14 years ago.
Webber has been accused of acting “desperately” to help force through the controversial reforms by flying thousands of miles to “make poor people in another country poorer”.
I hear Tory whips even persuaded Lord Lloyd Webber to fly back from New York for tonight’s #taxcredits vote. Desperate, a touch.
— Tom Newton Dunn (@tnewtondunn) October 26, 2015
Following the crushing defeat, Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron said the government had been “forced into an embarrassing climb down”. He added: “George Osborne must now go back to the drawing board and come back with plans to balance the books that don’t simply attack working families who are already struggling to get by.”
.@OfficialALW I look forward to hearing your new song Don’t Cry For Me Baroness Tina #taxcredits
— John Prescott (@johnprescott) October 27, 2015
A Downing Street spokesman said: “The prime minister is determined we will address this constitutional issue. A convention exists and it has been broken. He has asked for a rapid review to see how it can be put back in place.”
Dave Prentis, general secretary of the workers union Unison, said: “Peers have now given the government a chance to think again and the chancellor should grasp that opportunity with both hands. Mums and dads – who are already walking a financial tightrope because money is so tight – have been having sleepless nights at the thought of losing as much as £50 a week next April.”
Update: A spokesperson for the composer said: “Andrew Lloyd Webber flew back from New York at his own expense to attend the opening night of Cats at the London Palladium. Coming back to London allowed him to vote in the House of Lords.
Tory lord Andrew Lloyd-Webber, worth £620m, flew in especially from New York at taxpayer expense to vote for tax credit cuts for the poor.
— Mark (@markblk9779) October 26, 2015
“He voted last night because he feels that it is important for democracy that the House of Lords should not override decisions made by the elected House of Commons. While there are important constitutional issues concerning the House of Lords, Andrew is pleased that the chancellor, George Osborne, is reviewing the tax credits situation.”
The spokesperson added Webber has “never claimed expenses from the House of Lords”.
Edmondo Burr
CEO
Assistant Editor
Latest posts by Edmondo Burr (see all)
- Police Arrest Suspect In Supermarket Baby Food Poisoning - October 1, 2017
- Seoul Secures Data From Electromagnetic Interference By N Korea - September 30, 2017
- The ‘World’s First Internet War’ Has Begun: Julian Assange - September 30, 2017