Tony Danker, the previous director-general of the CBI, is to obtain within the area of £500,000 from the enterprise lobbying group in a settlement reached practically a yr after he was ousted within the midst of a wider sexual misconduct scandal.
A number of sources described the settlement as being value within the area of £500,000.
The determine, which has not been publicly disclosed, seems to be at odds with an merchandise within the CBI’s annual report and accounts printed earlier this week, which stated that £188,000 had been paid in relation to director severance prices throughout its final monetary yr.
One Metropolis supply stated that this implied that a part of Mr Danker’s settlement was more likely to be paid out in subsequent years.
A CBI spokesperson stated: “In February 2024 the CBI settled legal action brought against the organisation by Tony Danker after his dismissal in April 2023.
“Neither the CBI nor Mr Danker have any additional remark concerning the settlement reached between the events.”
If appropriate, the determine of roughly £500,000 is more likely to elevate additional questions concerning the CBI’s dealing with of Mr Danker’s dismissal throughout a interval when the self-styled ‘voice of enterprise’ started to descend into existential disaster.
His wage within the yr previous to his departure was round £400,000.
The organisation was discovered to have presided over a tradition of sexual misconduct over a protracted interval, though Mr Danker was not personally implicated in any critical actions of that nature.
Scores of blue-chip company members, together with Aviva and John Lewis Partnership, resigned their memberships.
Some, equivalent to KPMG and NatWest Group, have just lately rejoined.
The CBI stays in a precarious monetary state, reliant on assist from a gaggle of excessive road banks.
The barrister who represented Mr Danker, Bruce Carr KC, and the previous CBI chief’s legislation agency, BDBF, are understood to have agreed to work on his litigation on a no-win, no-fee foundation.