03/11/2021, A discussion was heard in Parliament today to suspend Owen Patterson MP for a breach of the rules banning MP’s being paid backhanders for lobbying. He should have been banned for 30 days.
This is the first time since the Second World War that the House of Commons have rejected a recommendation from its own disciplinary committee to suspend an MP for misconduct. It’s expected that this historic vote could dismantle the standards regime that has been in place for MPs since the cash for questions scandal in the 1990s.
Andrea Leadsom MP proposed an amendment to stop Patterson being suspended supported by a slim majority of Conservative MP’s who stepped forward to support sleaze and corruption. Blyth Valley’s ‘redwall’ MP was one of those.
13 Honest Tories voted with the opposition and 60 went to the toilets and dodged the vote.
Labour MP Chris Bryant chair of the standards committee, said the move would “be dismantling the rule on paid advocacy which has been around in some shape or form since 1695” and that the public would view it as parliament having “licensed cash for questions”.
A committee is now being set up to consider a new system, and to decide whether the Paterson case needs to be reviewed, but the opposition parties say they will boycott it - which means it may never get off the ground. (The amendment passed today says it has to include opposition MPs.) Sir Keir Starmer says that this amounts to corruption and that Boris Johnson - who took the unusual step of ordering Tory MPs to vote down the standards committee report - is the source of the “rot”.
https://votes.parliament.uk/Votes/Commons/Division/1125
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