Lord Waheed Alli: Who is the Labour peer behind Sir Keir Starmer’s donation row?! B
Lord Waheed Alli, 59, was appointed Sir Keir Starmer’s chief campaign fundraiser in 2022. He became the youngest peer in history when Sir Tony Blair appointed him to the House of Lords in 1998.
Lord Waheed Alli is the Labour Party’s biggest donor.
Thanks to successful careers in banking, TV, and fashion, the 59-year-old has given more than £700,000 of his estimated £200m fortune to the party.
But this month, thousands gifted to Sir Keir Starmer and his wife in luxury workwear and glasses landed the prime minister at the centre of a freebies row, in which he was revealed to have received more than any other MP.
Banking and TV fortunes
Waheed Alli was born near Croydon, south London, in the 1960s to a Trinidadian mother and a Guyanese father.
His mother, who worked as a nurse, was Hindu, but Lord Alli decided to take up his father’s Muslim faith instead.
He left school at 16 with nine O Levels and got a job as a researcher for the specialist financial magazine Planned Savings.
After three years one of the companies he wrote about invited him for an interview. His second job – as an investment banker for Save & Prosper – eventually saw him able to charge £1,000 a day as a City consultant.
He started making contacts in the Labour Party in the late 1980s – at the same time that his then partner Charlie Parsons convinced him to help launch a new TV production company with singer Sir Bob Geldof.
Lord Alli and Mr Parsons lived together in a mansion in Kent, where they would often throw lavish celebrity parties.
Their company – Planet 24 – produced The Big Breakfast and The Word, and the pair became highly influential members of the 1990s media scene.