
For months there’ve been so many chances to sort out expenses, but today – over a matter of minutes – the parties engaged in an embarrassing race to get their announcements out first for political gain.
Brown, having been beaten by the Tories in the “I’m sorry” race, was clearly determined for Labour to get in there first.
When they did Harriet Harman made the earth-shattering declaration that she would ask Don Touhig to come up with a proposal of how excessive expense claims might be paid back.

The real point, of course, is that it was another announcement about taking action, rather than action itself.
If you went to Harman’s house for dinner, you would die of hunger before you got a sniff of any food.
Minutes later Cameron got to his lectern and, frankly, made Labour's plan look stupid. Tory MPs would pay thousands of pounds back immediately and any who refused would be sacked.

The leader called his ministers’ excessive claims “wrong”, but shadow cabinet members I spoke to said they had done nothing wrong and still felt entitled to what they claimed.
Resentment over this will linger.

That would see some members losing out to the tune of tens of thousands of pounds. Tomorrow will be another busy day in Parliament.
Cameron for PM? Sooner rather than later, please.
ReplyDeleteBrown is playing catch up again this morning. What a stupid game this all is. Everyone should just have a bit of backbone stand their ground and wait for the Kelly review.
ReplyDeleteThe outpouring of apologies and the desperate brandishing of cheque books is sickening. Everyone knows that the MP's are only exhibiting this level of contrition because they've been caught. Otherwise these bizarre expenses would have been claimed unchecked, unregulated and unreported ad infinitum.
ReplyDeletePeople who are really hacked off with their MP's performance should express their views through the ballot box at the next opportunity. But if you're disenchanted with the main parties, please vote Green or Independent (or even Monster Raving Loony) not BNP.