MP
Fiddles and Some Reluctant Lords
The history of MPs' Pay
- How MPs fiddle their
expenses - Do
Peers also Work the Expenses System? - Infrequent
voters - Jobs for former
Ministers
The Truth about Westminster - book by Dr Patrick Dixon - published
by Hodder 1996
Acknowledgements
-
Introduction - 1.MPs
Available for Hire - 2.Buying and
Selling MPs on a Large Scale - 3.MP
Fiddles and Some Reluctant Lords - 4.The
Power of Patronage - 5.The Truth
About Party Funding - 6.Sex, Money
and Power - 7.Whipping and the Death
of Conscience - 8.Secrets of Ministers
and Civil Servants - 9.Trade Scandals
and Arms Deals - 10.The Changing
Culture - 11.Rebuilding the House
- 12.Christians in Politics - Notes
- A Short Bibliography
'My MP would simply tell me to claim to the maximum limit, and
so I would make up the trips. It was total fiction.' MP's secretary,
1995
'A proportion of those who attend [the Lords and claim expenses]
every day play little or no part in our proceedings.' Member of
the House of Lords, 1995
We have looked at some of the ways that many MPs have earned 'a
bit on the side' by exploiting the fact that they are at Westminster,
and how this laid them open to accusations of impropriety, but have
they needed to do so because their basic pay was too low? Many people
have suggested that MPs should be paid twice as much, and in return
agree to forego any outside earnings.
The most Draconian suggestions include an absolute ban on any extra
earnings, while allowing MPs to continue whatever links they wish
on an informal and voluntary basis, as part of their public service.
However, others have said that in that case, the highest-calibre
leaders in society would be unwilling to make the necessary financial
sacrifices to enter politics, and Westminster would be emptied of
successful achievers.
The history
of MPs' pay (Return to Index)
Payment of MPs has been very low until quite recently. In 1322 the
Shires and Boroughs paid their knight representatives four shillings
a day and citizens two shillings a day, throughout Parliament.60
Local rates had tended to vary from two Aldermen representing the
City of London, who were paid ten shillings a day in 1296, to 500
mackerel paid in 1463 by the Borough of Weymouth to its own representative.
61
Direct sponsorship of MPs by their own electors had ceased by the
end of the seventeenth century. Their finances improved in the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries: being an MP became a quick way to get
rich from 'sinecure offices' and pensions. Many MPs paid large amounts
for a seat at Westminster, or sought a patron who had a few seats
to give away.
In 1911 Lloyd George campaigned for a regular salary for all MPs,
and called the existing system 'indirect, surreptitious and corrupt'.
62 However he seemed to have few scruples about selling
peerages as we have seen.
Salaried MPs had been suggested in 1780, 1830, 1838, 1870, 1888,
1892, 1893, 1895 and 1903 but MPs remained unpaid until 1911 when
they were granted an allowance of £400 a year from public funds.
This change came just two years after the trade union support of
MPs had been declared illegal. Lloyd George declared that it was
'not a remuneration, it is not a recompense, it is not even a salary.
It is just an allowance, and I think the minimum allowance, to enable
men to come here, men who would render incalculable service to the
State ... but who cannot be here because their means do not allow
it.' 63
The £400 was increased at irregular intervals until 1970 64
when William Whitelaw, then Leader of the House, announced an independent
review body. There have been attempts to link MPs' pay with other
groups, most notably senior civil servants. 65 In
1975, MPs' pay was £5,750, and £14,510 in 1982,, about equivalent
to a junior doctor one year after qualifying. Annual increases lifted
this to £34,085 by 1996, somewhat less than a junior hospital consultant.
66 In July 1996 huge increases were approved by Parliament;
but what was the situation up until that controversial vote?
MPs received a number of benefits in addition to salary: free inland
telephone calls from the House; use of rooms for secretary and administration;
free postage; free copies of Hansard and certain other official
publications. They also received very generous mileage rates - for
example 72.2p a mile for the first 20,000 miles using a car with
an engine larger than 2.3 litres. After 20,000 miles the rate was
still good - at 36.1p. 67 Such generous rates were
clearly subject to tax. No journey details were required except
where claims exceeded 20,000 miles a year. In addition they had
travel warrants for rail, sea or air tickets between home, constituency
or Westminster. Fifteen free return tickets were also available
for spouses and children under eighteen.
They had an office costs allowance of £42,754 a year which was supposed
to cover secretarial assistance, general office expenses and researchers.
Some spend far more than this. For example Simon Hughes told me
that he used up to £16,000 of his own personal income to pay for
additional staff and equipment .68 However, others
spent far less, transferring the rest into their own family account
by paying wives or other relatives as staff members. 69
Of course, many relatives provide valuable service, but since there
were no standard rates, an MP could choose to pay more to a relative
than they would to someone else doing the same work, or to pay a
spouse for no work at all.
Those MPs with Inner London constituencies could claim a supplement
of £1,289 70, while those outside London claimed up
to £ 11,268 (April 1995) for the costs of staying overnight when
away from home on parliamentary business. There was also a 'winding
up' allowance of £14,251 for someone ceasing to be an MP, to cover
secretarial and other costs in closing down the office, and a 'resettlement'
grant which varies between half to a full year's salary depending
on the length of service. 71
Clearly the value of the total remuneration package varied, but
let us take the example of an MP 200 miles from London, with a 2.4
litre car and a second home totally paid for by the job 'on June
1996 rates.
Annual allowance: £34,085
Mileage of 15,000 a year @ 72p per mile: £10,800
Overnight allowances: £11,661
Total revenue: approximately £56,500
Less costs:
London flat: £11,661
Car costs: £5,000
Total costs: approximately £16,500
Net disposable income (before tax): £40,000
Obviously the cost of a London flat will vary according to size
and location, while those who have been MPs for years may have small
or non-existent second mortgages, and large capital gains from a
second property in London when they leave Parliament.
We can argue about whether the package was really worth £34,085
or more than £40,000 but either way the income was low considering
the almost complete disruption of 'normal' family life, the lack
of job security in many cases, and six figure earnings in the private
sector or many of the professions.
John Butcher thinks that low pay has damaged Parliament: 'No middle
manager earning £40,000 with good prospects would want to be an
MP under current arrangements ... It's ridiculous that junior Ministers
end up commanding civil servants who earn more than their bosses.
72
Government Minister Alistair Burt was sympathetic to the idea of
a higher salary but with deductions on a sliding scale, taking into
account outside earnings directly related to an MP's role. 'Then
no one will be able to say an MP is being bought. At the moment
that's a danger.' He felt it was a different matter if someone was
carrying on with an established vocation. 'You shouldn't come into
it for the money but money shouldn't be a problem if you want to
do the job.' 73
This, then, was the background for a momentous decision, taken by
MPs on 10 July 1996, to award themselves a 26 per cent pay rise,
based on the figure recommended by the Senior Salaries Review Body
the previous month. The Commons approved this by 279 votes to 154.
Basic MP pay rose by £9,000 to £43,000, while Ministers were awarded
a total increase of £17,000, taking their pay from £69,651 to £86,991
immediately, with a further rise to £103,000 promised after the
next election. The Prime Minister's salary increased from £84,217
to £101,557 immediately, with a further rise to £143,000 after the
election. The opposition leader's salary increased from £65,992
to £83,332, rising to £98,000 after the election.
The leaders of all three main parties had urged restraint, and it
was unclear whether they would accept the increases. Most Labour
MPs ignored the plea, with twelve out of eighteen of the shadow
cabinet voting in favour of the rises. Most of the influential members
of the Conservative 1922 Committee also voted in favour. As part
of the package, excessive rates for car expenses were abolished,
with the top level of 74.1p per mile being reduced to 47.2p.
While a strong case could be made that MPs deserved a pay rise substantially
higher than inflation. I would suggest that it might have been achieved
in a more sensitive and creative way, perhaps by relating to the
amount of time in the House, age, experience and responsibility.
We will look at this further in a later chapter outlining proposals
for reform.
How
MPs fiddle their expenses (Return
to Index)
The audit of MPs' expenses is sloppy and open to fraud, and some
are taking advantage of this. The amounts involved can be large,
with over-claiming of mileage at very generous rates, or lying about
the size of a car engine, or claiming for a rail ticket as well
as car travel for the same journeys, or inventing taxi journeys
(receipts are not required), or paying wives for work not done.
Lord Nolan described 'fiddling of expenses' as 'a crime, whether
it is done by a Member of Parliament or anybody else', so how widespread
is it?
At least six cases of suspected abuse are uncovered every year by
the Commons Fees Office, of which an average of two are referred
to the Whips' Office for action. However, no MP has ever been publicly
disciplined and these may only be a tiny fraction of the true number.
It is disturbing that such matters are always kept secret even if
discovered, despite the fact that if the truth were known, such
MPs would face banner headlines, national disgrace and political
oblivion. 74
In November 1995, it was reported that the Inland Revenue had uncovered
twenty cases in the previous year where MPs had fiddled their tax
returns, by not declaring they had received a company car when claiming
car expenses against generous mileage allowances.
One Labour MP said, 'The rules are so lax it is difficult not to
abuse them. In fact I am the only Labour MP I know who actually
does the mileage.' Two MPs and three current or former Commons secretaries
have alleged that they know three other MPs who have been claiming
for bogus journeys. One secretary confessed: 'My MP would simply
tell me to claim to the maximum limit, and so I would make up the
trips. It was total fiction.' But such fiction was worth up to £1,300
every month in claims. A Labour MP said he knew a colleague who
was travelling to London by rail while pretending to do a return
trip by car during the week. 75
Another secretary described one year how her MP had diverted the
entire surplus on his £40,380 office allowances to his wife, even
though she did no work. The amount was considerable, since the only
actual costs. were £20,000 for staff and some extras for stationery
and other office costs say £15,000 'profit'. 76
Do
Peers also work the expenses system? (Return
to Index)
I spoke to a prominent Conservative Peer who was deeply troubled
but extremely anxious not to be identified. He described to me how
some six weeks previously, a Commons researcher had come to him
in great distress. While he was researching an unrelated matter
it had come to his attention that ten well-known members of the
House of Lords had apparently been claiming daily attendance fees
worth thousands of pounds for periods when they were not at the
House. The researcher had been shocked because of the seniority
of some of the people concerned and the high regard in which they
were held.
The Peer added: 'We could be talking about people claiming up to
£100,000 over ten years - that makes £1,000 cash for asking questions
look~ like peanuts.' One of the named individuals was a well-known
Conservative. My own investigations show no evidence of fraudulent
attendance claims, although, as we will see, it is possible that
a minority may be clocking up high attendance claims quite legitimately
with brief appearances on a large number of days.
Not long after I met this Peer, on 18 April 1995 the Daily Telegraph
ran a whole page feature on the dramatic growth in expense claims
by Lords - up by 20 per cent in real terms from £4.01 million in
1988-9 to £6.29 million in 1993-4. The chief reason for the rise
was the increase in attendance which had climbed from 316 to 378
as an average daily rate. But where are they all? If you go into
the Chamber at most points in the debating day, you will be lucky
to find more than a tenth of that number, although some Peers will
be in committees.
Every day that a Peer enters the Chamber is a day when allowances
can be claimed. Taking part in a committee counts as well. The rates
are as follows: day subsistence of £32, overnight subsistence of
£71.50 (which is supposed to cover things like a second home in
London), and £31 for secretarial support. In addition travel is
paid - first-class rail if available, 44.4p a mile for the first
20,000 miles of private car use, and then 20.4p a mile. Peers are
also allowed free telephone calls.
In 1993-4, more than forty Peers claimed in excess of £20,000 each,
and a total of 201 Peers claimed more than £ 13,000, compared to
half that number the previous year when there were fewer sitting
days. This is a remarkable difference.
Lord McIntosh of Haringey, Opposition Deputy Speaker, said that
some come 'because they need the money. There are maybe half a dozen
Labour Peers and presumably a lot more in other parties who come
in to the Chamber for a short time, and rarely speak or vote. I
can think of one former Minister who's never seen here after 3.30pm.'
Another prominent Peer told me: 'I am distressed by those Lords
who collect their money every day and don't do anything. I know
myself who doesn't go - and I'm there (almost) every day. 77
On the other side of the equation, of the 861 Peers who turned up
in 1993-4, 110 claimed no expenses at all.
The problem is how to measure in an objective way what individual
Peers do. Leaving aside for a moment the important work of Select
Committee members and Law Lords, there are two basic functions carried
out in the Chamber itself: making speeches and voting.
It is particularly revealing to look at the number of speeches made
by the Peers who attend most often. Of the 118 Peers who attended
at least 90 per cent of sitting days, eight Conservatives, one Liberal
Democrat and two crossbenchers (independents) did not utter a word.
However one Minister commented: 'It seems bogus to say that a Peer
should speak for the sake of it. Some are back-room figures. Anyway
the Lords would be an absolute nightmare if everyone spoke every
year.'
Lady Young, Chairman of the Association of Conservative Peers, said
that the idea that 'lots of Peers are getting enormous sums of money
for doing nothing' was ridiculous. 'Those who take the House seriously
just about cover their expenses. 78 And that of course
is the paradox. While one may ask whether some Peers are justifying
the daily cost of their attendance, the expenses are hardly adequate
for a Peer with few other sources of income, who wishes to play
an active part. It may be fine for a retired person, but not for
someone younger who is choosing to give up other remunerated work
to attend.
However, there are other less obvious advantages to being a Peer.
Lord Layton said: 'Let's be honest about it. Most people come up
to London to do other things as well as attend the Lords.' The forty-
seven-year-old hereditary Peer is a financier based in West Sussex.
'I make a few phone calls, use the fax machine and it's a great
place for contacts. I haven't spoken much but I make my views felt
elsewhere, in the Bishops' Bar. I'm not very happy about getting
up and speaking in public.' One Peer did not utter a single word
in the House during two parliamentary sessions in 1994-5 yet attended
on 127 days. 79
Peers have to put in an appearance to qualify, or sit on a House
of Lords committee. Their attendance is ticked off on a list and,
according to the Accounts Office, is verified later against expense
forms.80 However, no receipts are required from those
making claims. So, for example, there is every opportunity for a
Peer to pocket every penny of the secretarial fees including money
for postage, office equipment, books and periodicals, or to put
in for the full £71.50 for overnight accommodation even if staying
with friends.
Few people know more about Westminster than Lord Whitelaw, in many
ways the 'Father of the House'. Lord President of the Council, Leader
of the House of Commons, then Leader of the House of Lords, he has
a view of Parliament which is unique. I went to see him in his office
at the House of Lords where he is surrounded by warm memories of
his forty years in public life. He welcomed me with great courtesy,
slouched back into the seat at his large desk and pondered the past
with affection.
As part of our discussions I asked him whether he thought the criticisms
were unfair.81 'In a small way [it is] justified,'
he replied. 'Lords put in a claim form but it is checked. The one
that is most checkable is the messengers. If you get the money you
have to attend in a session. It doesn't say you have to stay for
a period in time. It is totally free will to take part; you can't
be made to take part.'
I asked if he felt the system was being abused.
'You can argue that someone who never voted and
never spoke - well, you could argue even then that he took an interest,
he wouldn't come into the place otherwise and that he therefore
is then discussing with his friends what is going on and trying
to influence things. That is at its extreme, and I think the numbers
would be very small. I think it is probably a perfectly sensible
way of doing it and it is very carefully watched.' 82
It must be remembered that not only do some Peers claim none of
the expenses to which they are entitled, but a further one in three
claimed less than he or she is due. For example, one former Prime
Minister claims nothing at all, while James Callaghan always claims
less than the going rate. (The majority of non-claimers are hereditary
Peers who attend only occasionally, and who combine coming to the
Lords to vote with other reasons to travel to London.)
However, around eight out of ten Peers do claim for everything they
are entitled to, and often for more than the total of £ 134.50 of
basic allowances per day because of their costs of travel. This
is perfectly reasonable. After all, as we have seen, the allowances
are hardly generous for a working Peer with few other sources of
remuneration. The issue though is whether the system is fair to
those who work the hardest.
The average daily claim per Peer can be worked out as follows: the
total bill in 1993-4 was £6.29 million which, divided by the total
number of days that Peers attended, gives an average figure of £122
per Peer per day (142 days).
Infrequent voters
(Return to Index)
Lord Whitelaw's comments about voting patterns prompted me to look
at this further. It is interesting to see who 'crawls out of the
woodwork' when the division bells ring, announcing that a vote is
taking place.
These bells ring throughout the Westminster precincts, giving six
minutes for Peers to find their way into the voting Lobbies from
wherever they are. Divisions can happen in the Lords several times
a day from the early afternoon until late evening. On some days
the House sits without voting at all, while on others there may
be a string of votes on minor amendments at relatively short intervals.
Although there is usually advance warning that a vote will take
place, the exact timing may be uncertain since it depends on how
many people wish to speak in a debate and for how long.
Voting is only part of a Peer's total contribution to the life of
Westminster, but you could argue that in a democracy there is nothing
more important than casting a vote, and that someone who attends
the House regularly as a Peer but never votes may perhaps be neglecting
a primary duty. Some Peers may dislike making speeches, but all
can pass through a voting Lobby, assuming of course that they are
actually at Westminster rather than having left after being ticked
off on an attendance list.
The differences in voting patterns are quite startling between Peers
who attend on a similar number of days and raise questions, although
many low voting 'scores' can be explained by meetings elsewhere
in the House, or by ministerial business or other public duties
as Peers.
I have heard the view expressed that voting 'is a waste of time'
in the Lords. But if that is the case, then perhaps making speeches
in the Chamber is also a waste of time, and much of the role of
Peers is reduced to irrelevancy. What is the point in being in Westminster,
expressing a strongly held view in the Chamber and then walking
out as if the final result did not matter at all? Of course there
may be some motions that seem less important, or where majorities
are so huge that an extra vote seems irrelevant, but voting is surely
central to parliamentary life - or should be.
I decided to look at the most recent parliamentary year for which
complete attendance and voting records were available, which was
1993-4 (ending in October 1994). Over the twelve-month period, the
House of Lords sat for 142 days and voted 135 times. The first step
was to obtain official attendance records for every Peer. This in
itself makes interesting reading. However, there are no cumulative
voting records to compare against this list.
The House of Lords Information Office was able to supply a complete
list of all divisions. The next step was to find all the dates in
Hansard transcripts of the year's proceedings (the length of an
encyclopedia) and to begin analysing a total of 25,862 individual
votes by over 870 Peers. A detailed picture then emerged of how
many times each Peer voted, in proportion to the number of days
they attended. The first thing to note is that the average number
of votes is 191, while the average attendance is twice this number.
The key is not the actual number of votes cast, but the frequency
as a proportion of the number of days each Peer is said to have
been 'in the House'.
Analysis of 135 divisions with 25,862 individual votes
Voting frequency (averages) per number of days registered as
present in the House of Lords.
Number of Peers voting once or more per day they attend
48
Number of Peers voting at least once every 3 days
567
Number of Peers voting only once every 10 days or less
68
Number of Peers voting only once every 20 days or less
18
Number of Peers voting only once every 30 days or less
8
Number of Peers voting only once every 50 days or less
4
As we have seen, some Peers do have heavy duties within the House
or within government and may find it hard to get into the Chamber
to vote, but all are allowed to do so, including the Lord Chancellor,
or whoever as Deputy Speaker stands in his place. 83
Some Peers are very frequent voters. For example, Viscount Gochen
attended 139 times and voted in 129 out of 135 possible divisions.
Lord Graham of Edmonton attended every day (142 times) and cast
129 votes - a remarkable achievement since he was also a part of
six different Select Committees.
As each vote was analysed, it became clear that some Peers choose
to come in especially on days when there are going to be a number
of important votes. They finish with totals of more than one vote
per day. Take Lord Jeffreys, for example, who turned up on only
15 days but managed to vote 37 times; or Baroness Cumberledge who
attended 111 times and voted in 117 divisions; or Baroness Chalker
who attended 88 times and voted 94 times, or Lord Chesham who clocked
up 62 votes in 50 days. In contrast, some other Lords vote very
infrequently.
Jobs for
former Ministers (Return to Index)
Any discussion of pay, allowances or expenses would be incomplete
without turning to the vexed issue of ministerial pay, and jobs
in the private sector after a time in office. As we have already
seen, government Ministers have to give up all other earnings. Prior
to July 1996 a Parliamentary Under Secretary could receive as little
as £14,000 extra for all the added effort and responsibility after
taking the reduction in MPs' salary into account. In practice, an
MP's income can still actually fall as he or she is promoted, despite
the recent increase in ministerial pay.
The weight of ministerial office falls unequally on a few, yet all
cabinet Ministers receive the same, apart from the Prime Minister.
For example, Ministers serving Northern Ireland have been plunged
into a security nightmare from the moment of appointment, continuing
for years after ending their time in office. They and their families
have been seen as prime terrorist targets, needing round-the-clock
protection. This has posed terrible strains on personal privacy,
on marriages and on children. 84 Yet there has not
been any additional income to compensate for these intrusions, which
continued during the cease-fire period, albeit to a lesser extent.
There can be a benefit to Ministers on resignation or after being
sacked. You could be set up for life afterwards. A survey published
by Labour Research found that former Cabinet Ministers who served
under Margaret Thatcher and John Major held a total of 125 directorships
and 30 consultancies. Out of 40 ex-Cabinet Ministers still alive,
31 had 15 jobs in business. 85
Several former Ministers had far larger incomes in the private sector
than when they were in government. Yet this is by no means a universal
picture. Many former Ministers return to the back benches with no
extra means of support other than as an MP with other associated
income.
Lord Ennals was particularly disgusted with the way Ministers have
gone from government into companies they dealt with in government.
'The most awful type of example ' is those who have been involved
in privatising while in government. Before you know where you are,
they are getting sums of money out of being on the boards of the
industries they have privatised.' Surely it is legitimate for the
public to be concerned at any area of policy making where it is
possible that a Minister might benefit in the future from decisions
he or she makes today? It is a fact that if these industries had
not been privatised, certain job opportunities might not have been
realised for former Ministers. Here then was another potential conflict
of interest.
Many in Parliament fear that an 'over-reaction' could result in
ex-Ministers facing curbs which are too severe. Lord Whitelaw told
me: 'I think it's not fair to say that retiring Cabinet Ministers
shouldn't take other things on. I don't think that makes any sense
whatsoever. You can't have a whole lot of people who've done very
well as Cabinet Ministers and at the age of sixty or sixty-five,
all still wanting to have jobs and yet unable to. That's absurd
and quite a lot of them won't have any money anyway.' 86
So far we have looked at the damaging effects of lobbying and consultancies,
the problem of private interests, jobs for ex-Ministers, official
remuneration and ways of boosting expenses. We have seen overwhelming
evidence that the number of MPs and Lords whose integrity may be
compromised by these matters has been significant and growing. We
have seen how money can buy influence and how many in Westminster
have been only too willing to sell what they have.
We have also seen the gulf between what the public expects of those
in Parliament and the far lower standards that many MPs and Peers
are willing to accept for themselves, especially in financial matters.
This then is the background to the far more serious problems addressed
by the remainder of this book.
We now need to turn to another important matter. Money may buy influence,
but there is a far more effective way to swing an important vote:
the abuse of patronage.
The history of MPs' Pay
- How MPs fiddle their
expenses - Do
Peers also Work the Expenses System? - Infrequent
voters - Jobs for former
Ministers
Acknowledgements
-
Introduction - 1.MPs
Available for Hire - 2.Buying and
Selling MPs on a Large Scale - 3.MP
Fiddles and Some Reluctant Lords - 4.The
Power of Patronage - 5.The Truth
About Party Funding - 6.Sex, Money
and Power - 7.Whipping and the Death
of Conscience - 8.Secrets of Ministers
and Civil Servants - 9.Trade Scandals
and Arms Deals - 10.The Changing
Culture - 11.Rebuilding the House
- 12.Christians in Politics - Notes
- A Short Bibliography
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