Claims row snares borough MP
Saturday 30th May 2009, 12:40PM BST.
Telford MP David Wright was today among the latest batch of politicians drawn into the parliamentary expenses row.
Mr Wright was named in today’s Daily Telegraph as one of at least 13 MPs who pocketed thousands of pounds to give up their right to cheap rent, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill for the higher charges.
The MPs were offered lump sums for either moving out of the Dolphin Square block in Westminster of paying higher rent.
The offer came after it was bought from the council by a private company.
According to the Telegraph, the MPs who received a windfall included Mr Wright, Culture Secretary Andy Burnham and former Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell.
Mr Wright, a former Wrekin councillor who has represented Telford in Parliament since 2001, is said to have been paid £16,787 as part of the deal, according to the newspaper report.
He is said to have paid capital gains tax on the sum.
Writing on his website before today’s revelations, Mr Wright said: “When I was elected I rented a one-bedroom flat in London rather than buy a property and I have continued to rent throughout my time as an MP.
“The major items I claim for each month are the rent on the flat, currently £1,100 a month, council tax and utility bills. I also claim overnight subsistence of £25 when parliament is sitting.”
Labour minister Elliot Morley last night became the 13th MP to quit following the expenses revelations.
Mr Morley – who claimed £16,800 of taxpayers’ cash for a mortgage he had already paid off – announced he was stepping down at the next election after a meeting with party activists in his Scunthorpe constituency.
He said the decision followed a “traumatic” fortnight which had affected his family and his health. Mr Morley has repaid the cash, apologised and blamed the claims on “sloppy accounting”.
The decision to wait until the next general election to step down means Mr Morley will qualify for a pay-off equivalent to a year’s salary – presently £64,766.
His resignation came as a Times/Populus survey of ge- neral election voting intentions showed Labour on 21 per cent – its lowest ever level and well behind the Tories on 41 per cent. The Liberal Democrats came in at 15 per cent.
The situation looks to be even worse for Gordon Brown’s party at next week’s European elections, where the UK Independence Party is predicted to get more votes than Labour.
The Tories are on 30 per cent, with UKIP on 19, Labour on 16, and the Lib Dems on 12.
By Carl Jones
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David is no better than the rest ofthe snouters . He took the lump sum and we paid for his additional rent elsewhere ,great .I ask him once again why does Dennis Skinner claim about £80,000 less than him?, Dennis is one of the hardest working of M.P.s of course Mark Pritchard needs to answer the same question . D.L.Barnett
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Nice work if you can get it, if it were you or I wouldn’t it be deemed as ‘unearned income’ as far as the IR were concerned and on an MPs salary at a healthy 40%.
All aboard! The gravy train for Trough Town is shortly leaving from Platform 2. All aboard!
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Will the Shropshire MP’s be revealing their expenses in the open and honest way that the electorate demand?
Just what have they got to hide?
I for one will not vote for an existing MP if they do not open up their expenses to public scrutiny. This obviously plays into the hands of prospective candidates, but just what have our MP’s got to hide?
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Never mind the MPs and their petty pilferings – which was anyway a secret extra wage to give the whips more power over our elected MPs. Get rid of the whips – vote for independant MPs and MEPs who will vote for their constituents and not their parties. And if you real greed check out the MEP expenses becuase that fraud is well off the scale. support the juryteam.org candidate in the euro elections or get ready for more of the same.
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I’m once bitten twice shy, I won’t be voting again for those implicated in this grubby affair.Let’s see how they manage in the real world when the taxpayer funded persian rugs are pulled from underneath their feet.
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No matter what party they belong to, no matter how much the amount, no matter what the excuse, if any MP has made questionable claims – he/she should be out in whatever way achieves the objective. Sacking, demotion/sacking, resignation, retirement or just plain honest to goodness kicking into touch. Each is a disgrace and we should not tolerate them.
I heard a prominent Liberal Democrat politician on Sky News a few minutes ago saying that the Lib Democrats held the high ground because they “were not as bad as the other two parties”. Utter rubbish, spin and deceit, the Lib Dems have had 11 of their MPs named and outed for making questionable claims, ratio wise relative to the number of seats that they hold, as things stand at present that is more than Labour or the Tories. You are as guilty as all the others Lib Dems. No party is totally innocent and don’t try to make it so.
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