MP’S EXPENSES

Clearly all MPs are quite rightly under serious scrutiny over expenses, but waht is not being published is the hard work the Lib Dems have been doing for years to change the system: (Some of this is a bit technical, but overall it does show that we have been trying to stop the abuse.)

Background

 

A reminder of the Lib Dem record in pressing for greater openness and accountability for MPs

 

Resistance to MPs’ FOI exemption

 

Don’t forget – Liberal Democrat MPs have led the opposition to attempts by some Labour and Conservative MPs to exempt MPs from freedom of information laws.

 

In the 2006-7 session senior Conservative MP David Maclean, a former chief whip for the party, introduced a private member’s bill, the Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill, which would have exempted both Houses of Parliament from the scope of the Freedom of Information Act. The effect would have been to remove any obligation for details of MPs’ expenses to be made public. 

 

On 20th April 2007 the Bill was ‘talked out’ by Lib Dem MP Norman Baker, with assistance from Simon Hughes and a handful of MPs from other parties. But on 18th May 2007 it came back and was voted through by Labour and Conservative MPs. 96 MPs (plus two tellers) voted for the Bill at third reading – a majority of them Labour but with a significant number of Tories (and no Lib Dems). In addition to these 98, a further 21 backed (or were tellers at) the closure motion which enabled the third reading vote to take place before the Bill ran out of time.

 

You can find out if your MP voted to block the publication of MPs’ expenses details at the links below –

 

Vote to exempt MPs from FOI laws – ‘Aye’ vote is a vote for the FOI exemption –

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmhansrd/cm070518/debtext/70518-0012.htm#07051822001730

 

Vote on closure motion – ‘Aye’ vote is a vote to help the FOI exemption get through by curtailing debate and moving to a vote on it –

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmhansrd/cm070518/debtext/70518-0011.htm#07051822001729

 

Both the Labour minister and Conservative spokesman said they were neutral on the bill. All Lib Dem speakers, including spokesman Simon Hughes, spoke against the Bill and the party’s then leader, Ming Campbell urged MPs of all parties to reject it. (You can read a report on the debate at http://tinyurl.com/foibill.

 

Thankfully the high profile campaigning against the Bill paid dividends and the Bill ultimately fell because not one peer was willing to sponsor it in the House of Lords.

 

Attempts to strengthen FOI laws

 

Norman Baker, early in 2007, won a legal challenge to House of Commons secrecy. As a result, Parliament was forced to declare how much each MP has claimed in travel expenses broken down according to whether it was by car, rail, air or bicycle.

 

Tom Brake, then the party’s local government spokesman, introduced a ’10 minute rule’ bill in the 2006-7 session which would have –

(a)     removed the veto which allows ministers to overrule the Information Commissioner and Information Tribunal on FOI requests

(b)     introduced a time limit for responses to public-interest FOI requests

(c)     brought school academies and large private contractors working for public authorities within the scope of  FOI legislation

 

The Bill did not get government support and failed to get through.

 

Support for toughening up expenses regime

 

On 3rd July 2008 an unholy alliance of Labour and Conservative MPs voted down a number of proposals from the cross-party Members Estimates Committee (MEC) for tightening up MPs’ expenses and allowances.

 

Among the recommendations rejected were:

  • Robust external audit by outside professional teams for quarter of MPs each year (replaced by internal audit proposal)
  • Putting audit for MPs on same basis as for other public bodies
  • Reducing the receipt threshold from £25 to zero so that all claims, however small, would have had to be backed by receipts

 

The MPs who voted to reject this toughening up the expenses regime were 146 Labour MPs (plus two tellers), 21 Conservatives and 2 independents. No Liberal Democrat MP voted against it. Details of how each MP voted can be found here: http://www.publicwhip.org.uk/division.php?date=2008-07-03&number=253&display=allpossible&sort=name

(The ayes were voting for an amendment to the original motion which removed a number of the proposals. The noes were voting to keep the original robust proposals from the Members Estimate Committee intact.)

 

The following day Nick Clegg committed that the Liberal Democrats would unilaterally introduce the recommendations of the MEC, including independent spot checks of MPs expenses.

 

Nick Clegg’s proposals on expenses

 

On 9th April 2009, Nick Clegg set out a series of proposals for urgent reform of the rules on MP expenses.

 

These are based on the following principles:

 

1) Taxpayers have a right to know how their money is being spent

2) All expenses have to be justified on the basis of enabling MPs to do their job

3) Reform should not increase, and should ideally reduce, the total cost of politics to the taxpayer.

 

They include –

  • Personal additional accommodation expenditure should be restricted to rental agreements (no help with house purchases), utility bills, and council tax.
  • Payment of personal accommodation expenditure should be on the basis of the production of bills and rental agreement only.
  • Designation of first and second homes should be independently approved to ensure that payments reflect the necessary circumstances of Members in fulfilling their parliamentary duties and value for money to the tax payer.

 

You can find more details of Nick’s proposals here –

http://www.nickclegg.com/2009/04/mps-expenses-reform/

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