Mohamed Mansour (businessman)

Sir Mohamed Mansour (Arabic: محمد منصور; born January 1948)[1] is an Egyptian-born British billionaire businessman and former politician.[2][3] He is the chairman of Mansour Group, a US$6 billion conglomerate. In November 2023, Forbes estimated his wealth at $3.6 billion.[4]

Sir
Mohamed Mansour
محمد منصور
Minister of the Transportation Of Egypt
In office
29 January 2005 – 27 October 2009
PresidentHosni Mubarak
Prime MinisterAhmed Nazif
Personal details
Born1948 (age 75–76)
Alexandria, Kingdom of Egypt
Children2
RelativesYoussef Mansour (brother)
Yasseen Mansour (brother)
EducationNorth Carolina State University
Auburn University
OccupationBusinessman, Chairman of Mansour Group

He served as Minister of the Transportation in Egypt between 2005 and 2009.[5] In May 2023, he donated £5 million to the United Kingdom's Conservative party, making him the second-largest-ever donor to the party after Frank Hester.[6][3][7]

Early life

Mohamed Mansour was born into one of the most prominent business families in Alexandria. The family business, Mansour Group, controls nine of Egypt's top Fortune 500 companies, though it needed to survive the nationalisation and confiscation of its assets in 1965.[8]

Mansour gained an engineering degree from North Carolina State University in 1968, and a master's in business administration from Auburn University in 1971, teaching there until 1973.[9]

Career

With his two brothers, Mansour maintained an active role in the Mansour Group, the family business, building close ties as distributors for US companies including Chevrolet, Marlboro, General Motors, and Caterpillar.[8] Some of his other interests include Metro, the largest Egyptian supermarket chain, and McDonald's franchises in Egypt.[4]

Mansour has led the group since his father died in 1976.[10] Since then, he has overseen all the major corporate developments, including setting up the company's private investment subsidiary Man Capital in London.[11]

In January 2006, Mansour resigned his business responsibilities to serve as minister of transport[9] . [12] Mansour resigned in October 2009 after a deadly train crash.[8]

In December 2022, it was announced he would become senior treasurer for the UK Conservative Party.[13] It prompted Private Eye magazine to ask: "So why on earth are the Tories making this autocrat-supporting Middle Eastern car dealing magnate their treasurer? Mansour has donated over £500,000 to the Conservative Party since 2015 through one of his companies, Unatrac."[14]

In May 2023, Major League Soccer announced that an ownership group led by Mansour, the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation, and professional baseball player Manny Machado would own San Diego FC, an expansion team to begin play in 2025.[15]

Tax avoidance and settlement

Following an investigation by HM Revenue and Customs into Mansour Group subsidiary Unatrac, in February 2023 Mansour agreed to a multimillion-pound tax settlement with the British Government.[16] Chief executive of the Fair Tax Foundation, Paul Monaghan, stated that Mansour’s company appeared to have been "compelled to cough up its fair share of corporation tax in the UK", but there remained questions about the specifics of the settlement, and that: "Mansour’s position as Conservative party senior treasurer would seem to be questionable until these issues are clearly and unambiguously resolved."[16]

Russian trading

Having donated £5 million to the Conservative Party May 2023,[17] the following year, the Labour Party demanded Tory Prime Minister Rishi Sunak return Mansour's donation, after it emerged one of Mansour's companies, Mantrac had still been operating in Russia after the invasion of Ukraine. In reply, Mantrac claimed it was winding down its business in Russia.[18] In January 2023, Private Eye magazine revealed that the website of another arm of the Mansour conglomorate, Mantrac Vostok in Nizhny Novgorod that supplied large earth-moving equipment, was still displaying machinery for sale, and when it contacted its sales department to ask if it was operating normally, received the reply "so-so".[19]

Knighthood controversy

In March 2024 Mansour was given a knighthood by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, an act that drew severe public criticism. Labour chair, Anneliese Dodds, said of Sunak: "It shows a blatant disrespect for the office he should feel privileged to hold."[20][21]

Labour MP and shadow minister Chris Bryant said it showed "the Tory party is utterly corrupt. To its core," and that Sunak had refused to answer questions about Mansour in Parliament only "months ago".[22] Reform UK leader Richard Tice also stated it was indicative of "obscene cronyism: the whole thing stinks like rotting fish".[23][24]

The editor of Private Eye magazine, Ian Hislop, was applauded by an audience when he stated on the BBC television show 'Have I Got News For You': "Mansour has come to Britain and given the Tories a huge amount of money and he immediately gets a knighthood from Rishi Sunak. That seems to me straightforwardly corrupt. Shouldn't they both be in jail?"[25]

Personal life

He is married with two children,[4] and lives in Mayfair, London.[16]

As of February 2023, Mansour had donated £600k to the Conservative Party.[16] In May 2023, he made another donation of £5 million.[6]

References