A Very British Revolution: The Expenses Scandal and How to Save Our Democracy
By Martin Bell
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About this ebook
Martin Bell
Martin Bell, OBE is a former BBC war reporter and Independent MP who is now a British UNICEF ambassador. After leaving school he served as a national serviceman and was posted to Cyprus during the emergency. He then took an English degree at Cambridge and joined the BBC where he established a reputation as a leading war reporter covering conflicts in Vietnam, the Middle East, Nigeria, Angola, Northern Ireland and the Balkans. After leaving the BBC he was elected as the Independent MP for Tatton. His books include In Harm's Way, An Accidental MP, Through Gates of Fire, The Truth That Sticks and A Very British Revolution.
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A Very British Revolution - Martin Bell
A VERY BRITISH REVOLUTION
The Expenses Scandal and How to Save Our Democracy
MARTIN BELL
ICON BOOKS
Published in the UK in 2009 by
Icon Books Ltd, Omnibus Business Centre,
39–41 North Road, London N7 9DP
email: [email protected]
www.iconbooks.co.uk
This electronic edition published in 2009 by Icon Books
ISBN: 978-1-84831-100-8 (ePub format)
ISBN: 978-1-84831-102-2 (Adobe ebook format)
Printed edition (ISBN: 978-1-84831-096-4)
Sold in the UK, Europe, South Africa and Asia
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Published in Australia in 2009
by Allen & Unwin Pty Ltd,
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Distributed in Canada by
Penguin Books Canada,
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Text copyright © 2009 Martin Bell
The author has asserted his moral rights.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, or by any
means, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Typeset by Marie Doherty
Contents
Martin Bell OBE is one of the best-known and most highly regarded names in British television journalism. As a BBC reporter he has covered foreign assignments in more than 80 countries and eleven wars including Vietnam, Nigeria, Angola, Nicaragua, The Gulf and Bosnia, where millions watched as he was nearly killed by shrapnel. In 1997 Martin became the first Independent MP to be elected to Parliament since 1950, and he has since campaigned tirelessly for trust and transparency in British politics.
His previous books are In Harm’s Way (Penguin, 1995), An Accidental MP (Viking, 2000), Through Gates of Fire (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2003), and The Truth That Sticks (Icon, 2008).
Swindlers’ List
I wish I had my own duck house,
Redacted and anonymous,
A shaded pool where ducks could float,
A pond, a river or a moat,
A place unto the manor born
Where moles would not uproot the lawn.
I was not born to privilege,
But loitered at the water’s edge,
And played the Honourable Member
From January to December.
I wish to thank the voters’ sense
For choosing me at their expense;
On their behalf I did my best,
Including things they never guessed.
Though my accomplishments were zero,
In fiddling I was next to Nero,
I was a self-philanthropist,
Master of the John Lewis List;
I had a profitable innings
And duly pocketed the winnings,
The subsidies, the perks, the pay,
The petty cash, the ACA.
The Tudor beams, the chandeliers,
The bills for swimming pool repairs,
The hanging plants, the trouser press,
Nothing exceeded like excess,
The whirlpool bath, the horse manure,
Whiter than white, purer than pure.
And so it was until, alas,
The MPs’ scandals came to pass.
I was your Honourable Friend –
A pity that it had to end.
And then to avoid the sneers of Mr Paxman
I wrote a cheque and sent it to the taxman.
Introduction
We have been through a period of political revolution the like of which we have not known in our lifetimes. It has been very British and very peaceful, but nonetheless profound. Its outcomes will permanently change the nature of our politics and especially that of the House of Commons. It has arisen from the publication of the detailed expenses of Members of Parliament, which were in most cases beyond reason and in some beyond belief. They ranged from petty thieving to outright fraud. They provoked what can perhaps be best described as a 21st-century version of the Peasants’ Revolt – an uprising of the people against the political class and its practices and patterns of corruption. Not all MPs were equally guilty. Some were not guilty at all. But the corruption was revealed to be widespread and pervasive. We have been witnesses of something unique in its character and which will, I believe, be positive in its consequences.
It was hard to know whether to laugh or cry: we did a bit of both. ‘Corruption,’ said Peter Ustinov, ‘is nature’s way of restoring faith in democracy.’ Great reforms are driven by great scandals. And this has been one hell of a scandal. Not only have we lost faith in our politicians: they have even lost faith in themselves. So the perpetuation of the status quo is not an option for any of us. These events will be studied for years by those who will write the history of our insurrection. This book, which was written as it unfolded, is an attempted first draft of that history.
So rich is the seam of source material that when I told a friend about it, he asked: ‘How many volumes?’ Just one will do for the time being. Others may follow. The list of misdemeanours goes on and on. Not all the politicians caught up in the scandal have yet been driven from office. But it has changed the weather in Westminster, the style of political campaigning and the terms of trade between the parties. So it is a very British revolution. It has really started something.
Alan Duncan (Conservative, Rutland and Melton) was one of the MPs who found himself in the thick of it. Not only was he Shadow Leader of the House, and therefore responsible for his party’s policy on MPs’ expenses, but his own gardening costs were found to be on the high side, including £598 to overhaul a ride-on lawnmower. A protester had himself filmed digging a pound-shaped flower bed in Mr Duncan’s lawn in Rutland and planting it with flowers. The video became an instant hit on YouTube. The MP wisely asked the police not to prosecute, and he said: ‘The outpouring of fury we are witnessing is like a spring revolution.’ But he also thought that at £64,000 a year MPs were underpaid and ‘forced to live on rations’. The MP for Rutland and Melton was removed from the Shadow cabinet.
There are those who believe that the outpouring of fury will pass like a sudden storm, and that when it has passed they can carry on much as they used to. There are others who understand that it has changed our politics permanently. I am firmly in the second camp. We cannot return to where we were, which was the politics of the pig trough, because the people will not stand for it. The revolution will not be complete until all the rogues in the House are gone and public confidence in the MPs remaining is restored. The overhang of the scandal is so great that even new Members in a new Parliament will find themselves initially on probation. The restoration of public trust in public life will be work in progress, perhaps for many years. They will have to keep at it. And so shall we.
My only qualification for writing this account of the ongoing revolution is that I am a taxpayer and a true-believing democrat who was once an MP and a part of the Commons’ system of self-regulation, the Committee on Standards and Privileges. I was there. I sat back and marvelled. I saw what worked and what didn’t – especially what didn’t. For all its neo-Gothic grandeur, the House had something of the Wild West about it: too many villains, too few sheriffs, and laws that turned out not to apply to the regulars in the saloon bar. Even ten years ago, from the vantage point of Committee Room 13, the regular meeting place of the Select Committee on Standards and Privileges, I believed that the regulatory system, such as it was, would one day hit the buffers. I had no idea that the crash would be so sudden and spectacular. Some resigned and others were left clinging to the wreckage.
Sir Philip Mawer, Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards from 2002 to 2007, took a similar view. He told Sir Christopher Kelly’s Committee on Standards in Public Life: ‘The recent furore over MPs’ allowances is a car crash which has long been waiting to happen. Not only has the reputation of many decent MPs but that of the Mother of Parliaments
itself has been seriously damaged in the wreckage. … The damage will take years to restore.’¹ He laid the blame on a collective failure of leadership in the House of Commons itself. MPs should have seen this coming, but fought shy of the reforms that were necessary to save their reputations.
This account of the scandal is therefore about more than moats and mole traps. It sets out to explain why and how the crash occurred. It looks ahead to the reforms that are necessary, in a House of Commons which will inevitably, because of its own shortcomings, have sacrificed some of its sovereignty and may yet need to sacrifice more. It analyses the half-measure of the Parliamentary Standards Bill. It draws on a variety of sources: my own experiences, conversations with some of my friends and co-conspirators in the House, contacts with politicians across the country, Hansard’s record of certain key debates, submissions to the Kelly Committee on Standards in Public Life, and the thousands of pages of the MPs’ expenses themselves.
It also sets out an unexpected military dimension. A sharp increase in British casualties in Afghanistan coincided with the news of the widespread misconduct of the political class. It raised a question of integrity: in terms of the military deployments and resources allocated, how could we entrust the lives and futures of the men and women of the armed forces to MPs who had in so many cases proved to be untrustworthy in their personal affairs, had gone AWOL from their responsibilities and who had appeared to exercise their duty of care, in some cases, principally to their bank accounts? While the soldiers were losing lives and limbs, one of Labour’s Defence Secretaries responsible for their welfare was walking away, over a four-year period, with £12,000 in petty cash. How can that make sense? Just work it out: or as the Americans put it, go figure.
I am obviously grateful to the Daily Telegraph, not only for its initiative in securing the documents that showed the extent of this misconduct, but for the thoroughness, even-handedness and sheer bloody-mindedness with which it presented them. Bloody-mindedness is a journalistic virtue. Day after day, the Telegraph and its Sunday sister paper just kept at it, and found gold in the silt that they sifted. They did us all some service. If we had relied on the ‘redacted’ records published by the MPs themselves, we would have had no idea of the extent of their misconduct.
My thanks also to Peter Cox of Redhammer, to Stevie Cook for her additional research, and to Peter Pugh, Simon Flynn, Andrew Furlow, Duncan Heath and Najma Finlay of Icon Books. Thanks of a sort are also due to the MPs themselves, whose milking of the system was so extraordinary that the book took on a life of its own and almost wrote itself. It was a ten-week labour of love – and of doubt and dismay and incredulity. It was also a satirist’s despair, since no parody could have matched the real-world story that unfolded.
From out of this shambles we have to find a way of rebuilding confidence and electing MPs who will deserve the trust of the people. There never was a golden age of parliamentary democracy; but some times have certainly been worse than others, and this is one of those times. What the House of Commons could be is one thing, and what is has become is quite another. It is not too large an ambition to hope for a Parliament to be proud of. So I shall place some signposts along the way. We are not, to be realistic, aiming for an unattainable state of grace, but at least for a politics of less disgrace than that in these past few years.
Chapter 1
Bath Plugs, Moats and Duck Islands
It began with an 88p bath plug.
The bath plug was bought by or on behalf of the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith, MP for Redditch since 1997. Along with the bath plug there were other items listed as necessary expenses, including a barbecue and a patio heater. They were all acquired for her constituency home, where she lived with her husband, who was her constituency assistant, and her two children. By any common sense definition it was her main home, since it was her family home and had been for many years; and it was where she was registered to vote. But one of the things we have learned about public life is that common sense flies out of the window when politics comes in through the door. She told the Commons authorities that her main home was her sister’s house in south London, where she rented a room, and maybe a little more than a room, while working in Westminster. This allowed her to claim all the parliamentary allowances that were due, and some that were not (which she duly paid back), on her home in Redditch.
As it turned out, Jacqui Smith’s residential arrangements, in which she switched her designated second home from one property to another, were by no means unique. Other MPs, and other cabinet ministers, did the same, sometimes two, three or even four times. This was because the second home, but not the main home, was subsidised by the taxpayer. The practice was known as ‘flipping’. But it seemed remarkable, and even borderline, when the story came out in February 2009. We ordinary people – including even ex-MPs like myself – had no idea that this was going on. A complaint was made to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Mr John Lyon, that Jacqui Smith was in breach of the rules.
Mr Lyon was fifteen months into his post as Commissioner. Unlike his distinguished predecessor but one, Elizabeth Filkin, he was not a rocker of boats or maker of waves. But it will be remembered that Elizabeth Filkin was removed from the job in 2002, essentially for doing it too well. She made MPs uncomfortable by the thoroughness of her investigations; and only now do we know how much they had to be uncomfortable about, which was why they resisted. As Elizabeth Filkin observed, they had the opportunity to self-regulate and they subverted it very, very seriously. The SNP leader Alex Salmond, one of her small band of supporters in the Commons, called her departure a ‘political assassination’. Mr Lyon was certainly aware of the precedent, although he never consulted her. He had a reputation in Whitehall as an official who went into his office, closed the door and stayed there. Besides, he was no more independent than any of the three Commissioners before him. They were servants of the House, and of its all-powerful Commission under the chairmanship of the Speaker. The House of Commons had always stood firm against outside regulation. The theory was that none was needed, since it was a gentlemen’s club of ‘Honourable Members’ who could be trusted, at least by each other.
Mr Lyon initially ruled that he would not investigate the complaint against the MP for Redditch who, like so many others, appeared not to know where she lived. This seemed to me such an extraordinary decision that I wrote to him about it. I had no formal standing in the matter, since I was no longer an MP. But I was a taxpayer like millions of others and had once served on the Committee on Standards and Privileges, to which the Commissioner reports; so I knew how the system worked – or in this case didn’t. I pointed out to him that previous Commissioners had experienced most difficulty with complaints against high-profile MPs, and hoped this wasn’t happening again. I noted that the affair was damaging still further the reputation of the House of Commons, and was sure that he would not wish this to happen on his watch. I politely indicated that I thought he had made a mistake.
He wrote back to me immediately. He defended his decision to take no action, on the grounds that the complaint had been based only on a story in a newspaper, The Mail on Sunday: ‘After careful consideration, I concluded that the newspaper report did not provide me with sufficient evidence that Ms Smith had breached the rules. I came to my own independent conclusion, taking no account of Ms Smith’s position in Government, and I hope without fear of the likely reaction from the press to this judgement.’ But in the meantime he had received another complaint (from a neighbour of Jacqui Smith’s in south London, about how often she actually stayed there) and had decided to investigate that.
Things then got worse for the Home Secretary. It emerged that she had made a claim of £10 for a cable TV service of two adult movies watched by her husband, Richard Timney. Mr Timney apologised and she paid back the money. It was a very public humiliation and clearly distressing for both of them and presumably for their family. There was a hidden dimension to the great public scandals of 2009, in which