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Brown sets out MP expenses plans | |
(10 minutes later) | |
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. |