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Gordon Brown today suspended ex-minister Elliot Morley from the Parliamentary Labour Party and an aide to Tory leader David Cameron quit his post, as the Westminster expenses scandal claimed its first scalps. Mr Morley, MP for Scunthorpe, now faces expulsion from Labour ranks if charges that he wrongly claimed £16,000 in allowances for a mortgage already paid off are backed up by Parliamentary Standards Commissioner John Lyon. The Prime Minister also suspended former fisheries minister Mr Morley from his post as the premier's climate change envoy. Bracknell Conservative MP Andrew MacKay announced his resignation as a parliamentary aide to Mr Cameron after confessing he had made an "error of judgment" on his second homes claims.
Mr Morley, MP for Scunthorpe, now faces expulsion from Labour ranks if charges that he wrongly claimed £16,000 in allowances for a mortgage already paid off are backed up by Parliamentary Standards Commissioner John Lyon.
The Prime Minister also suspended former fisheries minister Mr Morley from his post as the premier's climate change envoy.
Bracknell Conservative MP Andrew MacKay announced his resignation as a parliamentary aide to Mr Cameron after confessing he had made an "error of judgment" on his second homes claims.
The contrast between Labour's socialist MP for Luton North, Kelvin Hopkins, who commutes to work and claimed £36.45 of his annual £4,800 food allowance, and the neighbouring New Labour MP, Margaret Moran, who "flipped" her second home allowance between Luton, Southampton and London and is now repaying a £22,500 under duress, could not be clearer.It's hard, however, not to agree with the actor Stephen Fry, that the blizzard of petty corruption revelations, orchestrated by a newspaper whose owners live in tax exile in the Channel Islands, has got out of hand. We shouldn't confuse wisteria claims, he suggested, with "what politicians get really wrong, things like wars, things where people die". Compared with the revolving door deals, which have propelled 28 former New Labour ministers into lucrative corporate jobs on the back of their Whitehall connections, and who then help bid for government contracts, MPs' expense fiddles are small beer indeed.<...>Westminster is finally being held to account. But the greatest danger of this week's parliamentary disgrace is the boost it will give to anti-politics: the roar of rage that they're all the same, the cynicism that nothing can ever really change, the conviction that an outsider on a white charger can clean the Augean stables. It is a mood that has almost always benefited the populist right and which in Italy elevated the authoritarian monopolist Silvio Berlusconi to power in the early 1990s on the back of a "clean hands" anti-corruption campaign.
The contrast between Labour's socialist MP for Luton North, Kelvin Hopkins, who commutes to work and claimed £36.45 of his annual £4,800 food allowance, and the neighbouring New Labour MP, Margaret Moran, who "flipped" her second home allowance between Luton, Southampton and London and is now repaying a £22,500 under duress, could not be clearer.
It's hard, however, not to agree with the actor Stephen Fry, that the blizzard of petty corruption revelations, orchestrated by a newspaper whose owners live in tax exile in the Channel Islands, has got out of hand. We shouldn't confuse wisteria claims, he suggested, with "what politicians get really wrong, things like wars, things where people die". Compared with the revolving door deals, which have propelled 28 former New Labour ministers into lucrative corporate jobs on the back of their Whitehall connections, and who then help bid for government contracts, MPs' expense fiddles are small beer indeed.
<...>
Westminster is finally being held to account. But the greatest danger of this week's parliamentary disgrace is the boost it will give to anti-politics: the roar of rage that they're all the same, the cynicism that nothing can ever really change, the conviction that an outsider on a white charger can clean the Augean stables. It is a mood that has almost always benefited the populist right and which in Italy elevated the authoritarian monopolist Silvio Berlusconi to power in the early 1990s on the back of a "clean hands" anti-corruption campaign.
If they had quietly heeded the warnings and reformed themselves, as several members themselves realised they should, all would have been well.
But they didn't and many have arrogantly enriched themselves whilst presiding over a bonfire of the electorate's job security/ pensions/ well being. We might have forgiven them the expenses scandal even a year ago, but not now. If they had competently cared for the nation we would have forgiven them, but they ignored the many and cared only for the few; the rich and themselves.
To the stocks with them. keep to the Fen Causeway
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