A pretty gross mischaracterisation. But I understand why you like to and want to believe it
Here's what he had to say about it, and I'm inclined to believe him rather than the less well informed partisans who choose to take yet another pop at a political opponent and anyone who seems vaguely aligned with them
"When the Prime Minister rang on March 13 2020 to request urgent help developing ventilators for the NHS, my immediate instinct was to do all we could to assist. This was an emergency, a time of fear and uncertainty for everyone and a period of extreme volatility for businesses. Nevertheless, we put commercial projects on hold and engaged 450 Dyson people from around the globe to begin the huge task of developing a ventilator from scratch.
There were myriad questions, from the technical to medical and compliance. It was in this context that we wrote formally to the Chancellor on March 15 for clarification on how UK tax rules would apply during this period of unprecedented upheaval. This was to ensure no one was inadvertently penalised and that we, and others, could attack the task with the right team. We did not wait for a response and started work immediately.
These issues were subsequently raised with the Prime Minister by text, as we sought urgent assurances about assumptions we were having to rely on. The clarifications we asked for were of general application affecting the treatment of international businesses and people supporting the national effort, including health workers. This is evident from the Chancellor’s subsequent letter to the Treasury Committee of April 9.
Dyson employees worked around the clock to develop a new ventilator in 30 days and I pay tribute to their exceptional expertise and commitment.
We received a conditional government order for 10,000 machines and by May 8 we were ready for production with medical approvals imminent. However, mercifully, our ventilators were not needed. Neither Dyson nor Weybourne, its parent company, sought or received any benefit from the ventilator programme.
We voluntarily forwent the chance to reclaim £20 million of costs from the Government. We have never claimed any Covid support, including furlough, for any of our businesses, from any government anywhere. And yet, it has been argued that in the PM’s direct dealings with me I was seeking some kind of preferment. What favours did anyone believe I was exacting from contact with the Prime Minister as part of a project where Dyson voluntarily donated £20 million of its resources?
It was entirely the right thing for the Prime Minister to contact me directly. We have 4,000 people in the UK as well as global supply chains and advanced manufacturing expertise. Dyson teams around the world volunteered, enabling 24-hour working. In these circumstances why wouldn’t we seek clarification, when we needed it, from the decision makers themselves? Far from concealing the text exchanges, we shared them explicitly with officials at the Treasury and No 10 via email on March 28.
The BBC’s characterisation of me as a prominent Conservative donor, or supporter, leveraging a position of power to extract favours from the Prime Minister, is completely untrue. I have met Boris Johnson only three times – always with officials – the last time in 2016. I have not attended any Conservative social events. When the BBC contacted us, we answered all of Laura Kuenssberg’s many questions. She did not ask if I am a Conservative donor. In her broadcast, however, the BBC claimed I was a prominent Conservative supporter - this she later admitted was based on a charitable donation shown on the Electoral Commission register of £11,450, made by The James Dyson Foundation to the Wiltshire Engineering Festival.
A staggering claim. She and the BBC made this grotesque mischaracterisation to justify their “sleaze” story which would otherwise simply not have stood up.
The festival, run in 2016 and 2017, was attended by thousands of local school pupils to encourage young people into engineering. For the record, the total donations I have made to political causes in my entire life amount to £800. Laura Kuenssberg also argued that I had spoken at the Conservative Party Conference in 2009 to further justify her story. But I have spoken at the Labour Party conference as well, in 1998, and on both occasions the topic was engineering."