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PM proposes expenses 'overhaul' Brown sets out MP expenses plans
(10 minutes later)
Gordon Brown has promised a parliamentary vote as early as next week to overhaul the controversial system of MPs' expenses. Gordon Brown has said he will call a parliamentary vote as early as next week to overhaul the controversial system of MPs' expenses.
The prime minister said politicians had to "act urgently with interim proposals to restore people's confidence".The prime minister said politicians had to "act urgently with interim proposals to restore people's confidence".
The move follows revelations about the use of second home allowances by several MPs, including some ministers.The move follows revelations about the use of second home allowances by several MPs, including some ministers.
These should be abolished in favour of flat-rate daily expenses for attending the House of Commons, Mr Brown said.
The Committee on Standards in Public Life is due to publish a review of pay and expenses by the end of the year.The Committee on Standards in Public Life is due to publish a review of pay and expenses by the end of the year.
'Public service'
But Mr Brown, a succession of whose ministers have been embarrassed by revelations of their expenses claims, said changes had to happen more quickly.
In a video statement on the Downing Street website, he said: "I believe we have to act urgently with interim proposals to restore people's confidence that MPs are there to serve the public and not themselves.
"With these changes I hope that the work of MPs can be recognised again for what it is - service to the public."
Calls to reform the second home allowances system have increased recently, with revelations about several MPs' use of the money.
It emerged earlier this month that Transport Secretary Geoff Hoon and Chancellor Alistair Darling had claimed for second homes and rented out their London apartments while living in taxpayer-funded flats.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has apologised for "mistakenly" claiming £10 for adult films her husband watched, and is being investigated after claiming at least £116,000 on her family constituency house in Worcestershire which she designated as her second home.
She had designated her sister's London home, which she shares when in London, as her "main" home in her claims.
The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, John Lyon, has also confirmed he is investigating Leyton and Wanstead MP Harry Cohen, who claims costs for his east London home because he lists a house 70 miles away in Colchester, Essex, as his main residence.
Mr Lyon is also investigating a complaint about Labour minister Tony McNulty, who claimed thousands of pounds in allowances for the house his parents lived in, in his Harrow East constituency.
The Committee on Standards in Public Life has already brought forward its wider inquiry into MPs' expenses, with a report due towards the end of the year.