Sam Coates Chief, Political Correspondent
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David Cameron put more than £21,000 in mortgage interest for his Oxfordshire home on expenses, the House of Commons revealed yesterday.
The most detailed breakdown to date of MPs’ second-home allowance has revealed that the public footed the bill for successive prime ministers’ television licences, Tony Blair’s dishwasher, Sir Menzies Campbell’s laundry and £415 a month for cleaning Gordon Brown’s flat in 2005-06. Mr Brown is understood to have used a contract cleaner supplied by the building, pushing up his cost for cleaning and food to more than £7,000 in a year. He also put “TV subscriptions”, which includes payments to Sky, on his expenses.
The figures show that John Prescott, who was then Deputy Prime Minister, claimed the maximum £4,000 for food, an allowance for which MPs do not need to submit receipts, in 2003-04 and £2,882 in 2005-06. He also drove exactly 1,000 miles in his constituency in 2003-04, for which he was reimbursed £561.50. The Green Book, which sets out the rules, says that MPs can claim only for out-of-pocket expenses and should not automatically claim the maximum.
Some MPs spent their allowance on a number of different expenses, but Mr Cameron and George Osborne, the Shadow Chancellor, used almost their entire £21,634 Additional Costs Allowance on mortgage interest, spending £21,293 and £18,360 respectively. This is substantially higher than the other MPs, whose details were released yesterday. A Tory spokeswoman said: “They are part of the 2001 MP intake so property prices were higher. They are their second homes and this is completely legitimate and above board.”
William Hague had the third-high-est mortgage interest claim, at £13,626 in 2005-06.
The information emerged after the Commons released further details of six MPs’ second-home allowance from 2003-04 and nine MPs’ figures from 2005-06. A number of other MPs will follow and the rest are expected at this level of detail in the autumn.
The Commons authorities, guided by the Speaker, have spent tens of thousands of pounds trying to prevent this level of detail on MPs’ expenses becoming public, and are still fighting in the High Court to prevent information being published item by item rather than under the broader headings used yesterday.
The figures show that, as Chancellor, Mr Brown claimed nothing for food in 2003-04 but then charged £2,385 in 2005-06. Over the same period he stopped claiming the £2,450 for mortgage interest on a Westminster flat because he had paid off the outstanding amount. He charged £3,269 on repairs and maintenance in 2003-04 and £2,132 in 2005-06, which are understood to be service charges. The £4,918 on repairs was to accommodate the arrival of his son, John. The Browns still own the flat even though they now live in Downing Street, but do not rent it out: they use it to accommodate visiting friends and relatives.
In 2003-04 Mr Blair and Michael Howard, who were facing each other at Prime Minister’s Questions, both spent £4.32 on an A4 folder.
The figures show starkly differing attitudes to spouse travel: Mrs Brown claimed nothing, but Charles Kennedy’s wife, Sarah, spent £6,167.
Margaret Beckett, the former Foreign Secretary, charged the taxpayer £13,763 for service and maintenance, despite using an official residence, as well as £2,520 for food.
Heather Brooke, a freedom of information camaigner who secured the information with the BBC, said: “I welcome the disclosure, although the way it has been handled has been a farce and a waste of taxpayers’ money.”
How the party leaders fared
Gordon Brown
Mortgage: £2,450 (03-04) £137.50 (ground rent 05-06) Cleaning: £2,380 (03-04)
£4,982 (05-06) Repairs: £4,916 (05-06 – partition for son’s arrival)
David Cameron
Mortgage: £21,293 (05-06)
George Osborne
Mortgage: £18,360 (05-06) Food: £2,300 (05-06)
William Hague
Mortgage: £13,626 (05-06) Service/maintenance: £4,083 (05-06)
Charles Kennedy
Mortgage: £12,869 (03-04) Spouse travel: £6,167 (03-04)
Tony Blair
Mortgage: £3,958 (05-06) Cleaning: £1,331 (05-06) Other: £642.24 including TV
licence and dishwasher (05-06)
John Prescott
Food: £4,000 (03-04) £2,882 (05-06)
Margaret Beckett
Service/maintenance: £13,763 (05-06) Source: House of Commons, via BBC and
Heather Brook
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Whatever the rights and wrongs of MP's expenses the important thing is transparency; we can see what is going on and we have the right to complain. If we want quality politicians, we are going to have to pay for it and second homes is part of the package, there will always be those who abuse the system but we know they will always be caught out.
What is outrageous is the expenses of those who hide behind Crown immunity such as university office bearers, if you complain, they simply instruct solicitors to act on their behalf and threaten the complainant at public expense to conceal their own misconduct. In Wales, the Public Audit (Wales) Act 2004 has banned any member of the taxpaying public from making any complaint to this effect; they have also banned the Auditor General for Wales from intervening. You are also banned from making any complaint to so-called regulators. What is good enough for MPâs is good enough for everyone else; we cannot have a corrupt elite.
Trevor, Llandysul, UK
Phil Black, Phil, no good just voting them out of office. The next lot will just jump on the same gravy train. The whole political system needs to be thoroughly overhauled and cleansed of these parasites.
Neil, Gloucestershire, England
An expense review is necessary and the review committee should be from ordinary decent taxpayers. The speaker shouldn't be even considered at all.
emily, Birmingham, uk
It seems that the trough is becoming bigger and bigger
john, Cardiff, uk
So that's where all the pies went.
Roger, Surrey,
Yep ! Cromwell , where are the rest of the claims??
Disgruntled Dorothy, Glasgow, Scotland
none of them are fit to hold office, vote them out.
phil black, slough, england
If MP's are claiming for interest payments on motgages to buy their second homes then surely they ought to pay back any profit that they have made when they sell these homes.
John Brookes, Yeovil, Somerset
How typical, when the rest of have had mortgage relief abolished on a single residence, that these blighters can still claim for everything going.! No wonder they want to stop us from getting the full SP. Time the whole establishment got sorted out, assuming that's even remotely possible.
Milo, Uckfield, UK
How much longer do we have to tolerate these Parasites in Parliament? For heaven's sake, vote them all out at the next election, there should, however be a mechanism in place to remove such people from office right now, we have all been betrayed in many ways by these individuals.
Members of the three main parties have sold us down the river on Europe and now we find they have their fingers in the till as well, they must ALL go!
Clive Burghard, LANCING, ENGLAND
A case of Live as I say not as I do.
Jon Nemo, Llanelli , UK
Welcome to the New Order of GREED. This does not tell the whole picture, I would like to see all MP's expenses from the momement the entered the house to represent the people of this country. No wonder Labour are more than happy to raise the tax burden and licencing they are not paying it? Who pays their council tax is it the taxpayer?
steve tea, manchester, cheshire
Legitamate expenses for work are fine but spending to meet limit targets is pathetic and sadly reflects the general mentality of public bodies in the UK. ie why spend £1 when the limit is £5, those gullible taxpayers are funding it! Just confirms politicians are a waste of time and money and why I haven't voted in the last five elections.
Ian, Bristol,
Ok so we got the price of one takeaway for John Prescott. wheres the rest the rest of his claims?
Cromwell, Leeds, England