When the Prime Minister expressed his full confidence in Baroness Scotland, you could tell she was on the political equivalent of death row. Today she has taken a further step towards political oblivion. First there is the revelation that her ex Housekeeper's flat has been raided by the Border Agency. Secondly, she has been unable to provide copies of the papers she should have copied under the very legislation which she, herself, took through Parliament. She cannot even plead ignorance as a defence. But thirdly, there is the revelation in the Sunday Times that she has claimed £170,000 of London living allowances which she is clearly not entitled to under the rules. You can only claim it if you live outside London, yet she has listed her London home as her main home since 2001.
Toast.
UPDATE: And a second Labour Peer, Childrens' Minister Baroness Morgan (you know, the one who Humphrys roasted on Today over the paedo register) has been claiming £140,000 because she lists a holiday cottage as her main residence. Toast with butter.
I think I see political interference in the Judicial system all the time. Why does it seem to take an age for any action or decision, if there is some political connotation to the offence. Why no action against Uddin, or the other Lords and Baronesses come to that. The MPs fraudulent mortgage claims. That chap Abrahams was not prosecuted, how did that happen?
ReplyDeleteIt happens too often to be a coincidence!
Pete-s
I have to say that this all feels a little like the "Back to Basics" debacle the Tories suffered in the 1990s. To horribly conflate cliches, it is really dumb to throw stones without looking in your closet to see whether your skeletons have any sins....
ReplyDeleteAs soon as politicians move from a sense of entitlement to a sense of duty the sooner this country can start rebuilding itself.
ReplyDeleteHow dare these has-beens enrich themselves with my money.
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1991/ukpga_19910005_en_1#l1g5
ReplyDeleteWhere does the act say you have to live outside London to be paid the £38K? It says the amount is linked to the amount paid to backbench peers who live outside the capital, but that's all.
The Sunday Times have screwed up big time.
Not at all. Your main residence has to be outside London.
ReplyDeleteWhere's the strawberry jam?
ReplyDeleteIt sounds very, very similar to the stunts MPs were pulling with their home designations. All "technically within the rules" but utterly disingenuous nonetheless. The difference being that we can't vote GOATS out of office like we can MPs. Well, other than throwing out their party political bosses in the Commons.
ReplyDeleteShe cannot resign or be sacked.
ReplyDeleteThe only person eligible to replace her as Attorney general would seem to be David "Mastermind" Lammy.
But where in the law does it say that, Iain? It doesn't.
ReplyDeleteIt says that Lords ministers will get paid X amount and that future increases in that amount will be based on the sum paid to peers whose primary residence is outside London.
NOWHERE in the act does it say a minister has to have main residence outside London, look at the link I posted above.
The Sunday Times and Guido have a Houses of Parliament fact sheet that says otherwise, but the link here is to the actual LAW, which last time I checked was more important.
Enoch Powell!
ReplyDeleteEnoch Powell!
Dan Hannan used the word "exotic".
Enoch Powell!
Racism!
Racism!
Iain Dale!
Racism!
Dan Hannan!
Racism! Racism! Racism!
Enoch Dale!
So can we PLEASE have the General Election soon.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure how much more of these criminals in power I can take before I go round to my local Labour Party HQ and put a brick through the window.
The Act states an allowance is available to cover expenses incurred "in staying overnight away from his main or only residence".
ReplyDeleteIt cannot, therefore, be applicable to anyone who stays in their main residence. If your main residence is in London and you stay there every night, you cannot claim an allowance that's meant to cover expenses incurred while staying away from your main residence.
What is difficult or confusing about this?
I'll think you find after investigation she will be found to have done nothing wrong.
ReplyDeleteAfter all under Labour laws are for other people.
Humphrys, 'roasting'?
ReplyDeleteHow very unpleasant.
Then again, maybe she likes that sort of thing.
I like the smell of toast in the morning...
ReplyDeleteIt's weaker than that. The factsheet does refer to a second home in London, but there's no indication that the expression is intended as a term of art nor does context appear to require it. But the most breathtaking aspect of this is that the right having screamed to the rafters about reporting the illegal maid to the Border Agency is now affecting concern that the hapless woman has had a visit. What did you think was going to happen?
ReplyDeleteThere is hardly any point in being a Labour Peer unless you can fill your pockets. It is called patronage. It is a reward for apparatchiks.
ReplyDelete@Anon 4:54
ReplyDeleteWhere, may I ask, did you get your LLB? I ask this because, given the absolute tone of your declarations, I know that you would never set yourself up as an expert on statutes without having first acquired a full legal education.
So, where was your LLB? And did you complete your DipPL? Are you qualified for the Bar?
"I know that you would never set yourself up as an expert on statutes without having first acquired a full legal education."
ReplyDeleteWhy not? Most people are prepared to base their posts on something they saw in the Daily Mail. At least he appears to have read the statute.
I wish your words were true, however, it's not gonna happen. The BBC spin everything, Sky have genuine ability to reprot it as it is but oddly choose not to.
ReplyDeleteThe public juts are used to letting it go on, and we all bitch about it on blogs.
She will get away with it. Plain and simple.
At long last Iain. I posted about Baroness Morgan before 9am today.
ReplyDeleteOf course you're busy drifting round these talkshops this month. :)
My first reaction, on hearing of the Borders Agency raid, was to wonder if the hapless domestic's documents would end up being copied retrospectively.
ReplyDeleteI've got a FOI request in to the Borders Agency and DPP requesting details of total numbers of fines, prosecutions and instances of "valid defences".
Except of course they are both peers.
ReplyDeleteThey will carry on travelling first class on the gravy train.
Were they are sacked as ministers, the Lords have established (via Lord Taylor and Lord Truscott) that even if you blatantly accept bribes, the worst penalty is six months in the sin bin.
Not even a real sending off.
Jimmy and Anonymous.
ReplyDeleteShe used her first line of defence as the Act itself, without mentioning that it had been amended by statutory instrument.
Then, of course, was the amazing revelation that she had made the claim without nominating her main residence, although she admitted that she had nominated her London house as her main residence for other purposes. This indicated that she was aware that what she had done was wrong, but hey, it wasn't her fault.
At least that was what I read in the sports pages of Sunday Sport.
Most people are prepared to base their posts on something they saw in the Daily Mail.
ReplyDeleteStraw man that has no relevance to anything I or anyone else said.
At least he appears to have read the statute.
The point is not whether he read it. The point is whether he comes close to being qualified to interpret it and the answer to that is a resounding NO.
He is advancing a reading of the text that is decontextualised, uninformed and borders either on a deliberate attempt to mislead (presumably for partisan reasons) or on a simply amazing degree of ignorance.
It is legitimate to ask someone, who comes into a public sphere and declares himself to be the final authority on the interpretation of a statute, exactly what his qualifications are.
This Government obsessed in passing laws, some 3500 entries onto the Statutes book since it came to power in 1997.
ReplyDeleteWhislt it was busy on these, most of which attack our civil liberties, the Country was going bankrupt. The pinnacle of this obsession was the time and effort put into trying to get 42 days detention, as the financial sector went into complete meltdown, starting with Northern Rock.
Most of them are bad laws, the one that Baroness Scotland has fallen foul of certainly is, this does not excuse her, after all she pushed it through the Lords. Therein lies the answer as to why most of them are bad laws, they were all pushed through by the force of the "three line whips".
Because it is a bad law any charges brought under it should be easy to rebut, a good lawyer for the Baroness paid for at our expense, should see her get off SCOT free.
Iain Dale is back in prickly form. Thank gawd for that! It's nice to see some serious political barb from someone who is, after all, the Tories' (and so my) opening batsman.
ReplyDeleteMaybe there is hope yet for Britain. Well, just maybe.
"She used her first line of defence as the Act itself, without mentioning that it had been amended by statutory instrument."
ReplyDeleteWhat statutory instrument? Statutory instruments do not generally amend acts.
"It is legitimate to ask someone, who comes into a public sphere and declares himself to be the final authority on the interpretation of a statute, exactly what his qualifications are."
ReplyDeleteWell if someone comes on claiming to be the House of Lords then that will be an excellent point.
Looks like the
ReplyDeleteCabinet Office agree with your anonymous correspondent.
But then what could they possibly know about it, eh?
Questions on three fronts? Come off it Iain, you know and I know and the whole world knows that she will not face any questions on any front whatsoever. She might be reshuffled soon but that will be the end of it? Have you forgotten which country you inhabit?
ReplyDelete"Anonymous @ 4:15 said...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1991/ukpga_19910005_en_1#l1g5"
What have salaries and pensions got to do with allowances?
"Where does the act say you have to live outside London to be paid the £38K? It says the amount is linked to the amount paid to backbench peers who live outside the capital, but that's all."
1st year primary school question: "What is the capital of England?"
"The Sunday Times have screwed up big time."
No, sir, you did.
Not to mention the sly, smug way that La Beckett defended the grasping Baroness on Radio 4 Any Questions over the weekend. Did anyone else hear it? Enough to sour your whole weekend.
ReplyDeleteReally amazing the way these New Lab apparatchiks have done so well for themselves in the coinage department with hardly a word of criticism from a toadying meejah until recently. I wonder why that was?
I suppose some well-placed Tories will be positively wetting themselves with excitement right now at the thought of all the moolah they will gain access to in the near future - perhaps some of those Quango-deletion schemes will not mature once it is realised that they serve as excellent locations for Gentlepersons of an Emolumentary Disposition to be placed into!
Stand by for a rash of new barons and baronesses when Ordinary Dave sweeps into office!
Re: Any Colour But Brown.
ReplyDelete1) The allowance in question was created by the Ministerial and Other Pensions and Salaries Act 1991. That's why I linked to it.
2) You've obviously misunderstood my original point - the amount of money paid to Lords Ministers is linked to the amount claimed by backbench peers who live outside London. However, the law (introduced by John Major's government) does not say that ministers have to live outside London to receive it. All this has been confirmed by the Cabinet Office: http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/newsroom/news_stories/090920-lordsoffice-allowance.aspx
So the Sunday Times have screwed up - they based their story on the idea that you can only get paid the allowance if you live outside London, when the law says otherwise.