Boris Johnson Was Paid £95,000 For A Single Two-Hour Speech In New York, Records Reveal

It’s set to be a *very* merry Christmas in the Johnson household.
Boris Johnson was paid almost £95,000 for a single speech this month
Boris Johnson was paid almost £95,000 for a single speech this month
Empics Entertainment

Boris Johnson was paid a whopping £95,000 for giving a single two-hour speech earlier this month, it has emerged.

According to House of Commons financial records, the former Foreign Secretary received a £94,507 pay cheque for speaking to a New York finance company – as well as free travel and accommodation.

But BoJo’s bumper earnings don’t stop there. In addition to his £77,379 annual salary for serving as an MP, it was revealed that Johnson takes home almost £23,000 a month for writing his weekly column in The Telegraph.

Not bad work if you can get it – especially as the Oxbridge and South Ruislip MP reckons he only spends around 10 hours a month working on his articles.

Add to that the nearly £9,500 he pocketed in September and October in book royalties and it looks like it’s set to be a *very* merry Christmas in the Johnson household.

The £50,000 donation he received from hedge fund manager Jon Wood last month for office and staffing costs could also come in handy if the Conservatives find themselves in need of a new leader…

Jacob Rees-Mogg appeared to voice his support for Boris Johnson becoming the next Tory leader
Jacob Rees-Mogg appeared to voice his support for Boris Johnson becoming the next Tory leader
Jack Taylor via Getty Images

The details of Johnson’s pay come after staunch Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg appeared to voice his support for the ex-Cabinet minister taking over from Theresa May.

Writing in The Spectator, Rees-Mogg shared his hopes for a Tory leadership election in the near future. “I would not throw my hat into the ring as I fear it would be thrown back ‘Oddjob’ style,” the backbench MP said.

Johnson, on the other hand, “certainly makes politics interesting and has the qualities of leadership”, Rees-Mogg added.

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