Mone says she previously supported the
Labour Party, as did her family, but withdrew her support in 2009 after the
prime minister,
Gordon Brown, increased the
top income tax rate to 50%, also indicating that she would leave the UK. She further stated that Brown and his government mismanaged the country's finances during the
2008 financial crisis. During the
London riots in August 2011, Mone called for the army to be brought in and tweeted "People who riot, steal, cover face deserve zero human rights". In January 2012, she gave an interview to
The Sunday Times stating her intention to move herself and her business to England were
Scotland to become independent following the
2014 referendum on the issue. However, despite Scotland voting No in the referendum, Mone confirmed a few months later that she was leaving Scotland. On 10 August 2015, the government announced that Mone would lead a two-part review into entrepreneurship and small businesses, particularly focusing upon setting up small businesses in deprived areas, under the
Work and Pensions Secretary,
Iain Duncan Smith. On 27 August 2015, the prime minister,
David Cameron, announced a list of new creations of
life peers, including Mone. Her inclusion drew criticism from other business leaders. Some Conservatives questioned her suitability for the
House of Lords. Mone was criticised on
Twitter when her first vote in the House of Lords was to vote against a motion to delay government cuts to tax credits of around £1,300 a year for three million low-income families. Mone responded to the controversy by tweeting that people should "work hard" and not "look for excuses" for their own poverty. In October 2016 she said that she was wrong to support the cuts and she regretted the way she voted.
Attendance in House of Lords In her maiden speech in the House of Lords, Mone stated: "I look forward to playing a full and active role in your lordships' house".
The Times reported in 2018 that in the previous year, Mone had only attended the House of Lords on 12% of the days in which it was sitting, missing important debates including on the Brexit bill. In December 2022, Mone's spokesperson said she was taking a leave of absence from the House of Lords in order to "clear her name" of allegations [see PPE Medpro controversy, below] that had been "unjustly levelled against her". At that time, Mone had not spoken in a debate since March 2020 and had last voted in April 2022.
PPE Medpro controversy PPE Medpro Limited was incorporated on 12 May 2020 as a private limited company in England and Wales, registered to an address on the Isle of Man, at that time wholly owned and controlled by Anthony Page. Page had business connections with both Mone and her husband, Doug Barrowman. On the same day that PPE Medpro was incorporated, Page resigned as business as secretary for MGM Media, the company owned in whole by Mone that manages and receives payment for Mone's branding and media engagements. On 12 June 2020, PPE Medpro was awarded its first contract to supply
personal protective equipment (PPE) to the NHS
COVID-19 pandemic after one month of incorporation. This first contract was valued at £80.85m for the supply of 210m facemasks. Two weeks later, the company secured its second contract valued at £122m for the supply of 25m surgical gowns. The government awarded both contracts for PPE without competitive tenders under COVID-19 emergency regulations that waived normal requirements.
The Guardian later reported that throughout 2020 lawyers acting for both Mone and Barrowman "consistently and emphatically" denied any involvement with PPE Medpro when questioned; in November 2020, Mone's lawyer told
The Guardian that Mone "is not connected in any way with PPE Medpro". Barrowman's lawyers repeatedly denied that he was an investor in the company or a consortium supporting it, and said he "never had any role or function in PPE Medpro". In December 2020, a lawyer instructed by Mone and Barrowman told
The Guardian that "any suggestion of an association" between Mone and PPE Medpro was "inaccurate", "misleading" and "defamatory". In November 2021, a
Freedom of Information request revealed that Mone personally recommended the company to the government by lobbying
Theodore Agnew (then the
Minister of State for Efficiency and Transformation and cabinet minister responsible for procurement during the COVID-19 pandemic) and cabinet minister
Michael Gove (then the chair of the COVID-19 operations subcommittee) through its VIP fast-track lane for firms with political connections and that the company was awarded £200 million in government contracts. This high-priority process was set up in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in order to bypass the normal competitive tender process for procurement that was considered urgent. It further emerged in January 2022 that Mone personally recommended Medpro for a government contract five days before PPE Medpro had been formed; in one key email, sent on 8 May 2020, Mone, using her private email address, proposed supplying large quantities of PPE face masks to the government, saying they could be sourced through “my team in Hong Kong”. Despite Mone first claiming her involvement in the company went no further than a single recommendation, many further emails detailed extensive lobbying of multiple ministers and staff for months. Leaked
WhatsApp messages seen by
The Guardian appeared to show Mone further discussing intimate details of the orders including the size of garments that formed part of a contract. Mone was also shown to have lobbied for LFI Diagnostics, a company established as a secret entity of her husband Barrowman's
family office, Knox family office. Lawyers for Mone and her husband denied the allegations. An unnamed source told
The Guardian that Mone was "in a class of her own in terms of the sheer aggression of her advocacy" for LFI Diagnostics. Mone's lobbying of government was later described as bullying and hectoring ministers by Whitehall, and with her lobbying later accused of being "extraordinarily aggressive" and "threatening" by
Matt Hancock, the then
Minister of Health. Following a complaint by the
Labour peer
George Foulkes, the
House of Lords commissioner for standards launched an investigation into the relationship between Mone and PPE Medpro in January 2022. On 27 April 2022, Mone's homes in London and on the
Isle of Man and associated business addresses were raided by the police, who launched an investigation into potential fraud. The
National Crime Agency is pursuing a tandem investigation into PPE Medpro. It was reported that the NCA is liaising with the Crown Prosecution Service and could, ultimately, seek to bring charges under bribery or fraud laws. The
Financial Times reported that according to a leaked
HSBC report, the bank had frozen bank accounts linked to Mone and Barrowman in 2020 during an investigation into possible corruption in securing government contracts. The bank accounts were unfrozen in November 2020 after assurances from Barrowman that neither Barrowman nor Mone had any role advising UK government officials on PPE procurement and that Mone had no involvement in the business activities of PPE Medpro. Despite such denials, the HSBC report also documented Mone telling the bank that she and Barrowman advised government ministers on procurement, with Mone complaining that the frozen accounts were damaging PPE Medpro “indicating [she] may indeed have had an interest” in the supplier. On 6 December 2022, Mone's spokesperson said she was taking a leave of absence from the House of Lords with immediate effect "in order to clear her name of the allegations that have been unjustly levelled against her." In November 2023, after three years of denials, Mone acknowledged via
The Guardian that both herself and Barrowman were involved with PPE Medpro. Also in December 2023, as part of a public relations media "fightback” a PPE Medpro-commissioned and funded documentary (titled
The Interview: Baroness Mone and the PPE Scandal) was released on YouTube, produced by the investigative journalist
Mark Williams-Thomas. Besides film production, Williams-Thomas, a former police officer, had also been employed as private investigator to help try to identify the suspected source of articles in The Guardian that revealed that Mone and Barrowman had been lying to the public. On , assets controlled by Mone and her husband were
frozen under a court order obtained by the
Crown Prosecution Service. The
Financial Times reported that restrictions had been placed over £75m worth of assets, including a townhouse in
Belgravia, properties in
Glasgow, an estate on the
Isle of Man and numerous bank accounts. In June 2024, it was reported that a 46-year-old man, who was not named, had been arrested in connection with the criminal investigation into PPE Medpro, on suspicion of conspiracy to commit fraud and attempting to pervert the course of justice. On 1 October 2025, the High Court ruled that PPE Medpro had breached its £122 million contract with the Department of Health and Social Care to supply 25 million sterile surgical gowns during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Justice Cockerill found that the gowns failed to meet validated sterilisation standards and lacked required certification, rendering them unsuitable for NHS use. PPE Medpro was ordered to repay £121,999,219 in damages by 15 October. == Awards and recognition ==