Greg Hurst, Political Correspondent
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The embattled Commons Speaker issued a defiant message to his critics yesterday, saying that he would remain at least until the autumn to take personal charge of overhauling MPs’ expenses.
In passionate remarks in the Commons, Michael Martin told fellow MPs that only they could remove him from the duties they had assigned to him.
His remarks were ostensibly about a review of Commons allowances, but his clear implication was that he was determined not to let media criticism force his resignation as Speaker. Mr Martin’s intervention came as Labour MPs, led by Gordon Brown, rallied to his support, with one accusing the media of attempting a coup to remove the Speaker. The show of backing from ministers and Labour backbenchers will ease the immediate pressure on Mr Martin, who faced calls to resign after Mike Granatt, his spokesman, stood down, saying that he was misled over £4,000 in taxi fares claimed by the Speaker’s wife.
Hopes among his critics that he would use a lull in press attacks on him to consider his future and quit by the summer suffered a setback, however, with Mr Martin’s own bullish comments. David Winnick, an independent-minded Labour MP, urged the Speaker in the Commons to show greater urgency in a review of MPs’ allowances, which is not due to report until the autumn. This was set up after the scandal over the Tory MP Derek Conway, who used a Commons staff allowance to pay his student son £12,000 a year and large bonuses for “all but invisible” research.
Mr Martin retorted: “Unanimously, including you, this House agreed to put this matter to the Members’ Estimate Committee, which I chair. This House has charged me with a responsibility and I will carry out that duty until this House decides otherwise, and that is a good thing for the reputation of this House.”
Earlier, the Speaker was cheered by MPs as the sitting began and, grinning, paused to tell them: “Thank you very much.” Outside the chamber there were further signs of Labour MPs closing ranks behind Mr Martin, who was a Labour backbencher and trade unionist before renouncing party allegiance on his election as Speaker in 2000.
There was some relief for Mr Martin yesterday as the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, John Lyon, announced that he would not conduct an inquiry into the Speaker’s transfer of air miles to members of his family.
Criticism persisted, however, with Clare Short, the former Cabinet minister and now independent MP, saying that he was the wrong person to chair a study of MPs’ expenses and urging him to stand down at the next general election. Ms Short told the BBC One Politics Show: “I think he should not be in charge or chairing a review of expenses. I mean, he is also an MP and he also applies for the expenses and now there are also suggestions of not breaking the rules, but stretching them.” She added: “I think it would be a good idea if he didn’t stand next time.”
Mr Brown set the tone for moves to shore up the Speaker’s position, with a terse statement during a visit to South London: “This is a matter for the House of Commons. Michael Martin has been a very, very good Speaker.”
His support was echoed by Alan Johnson, the Health Secretary, who complained of “open season” on the Speaker, and by Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader, who spoke of a “witch-hunt”. Mr Clegg was more guarded, saying that Mr Martin would have to answer allegations against him and that the controversy highlighted the need for an “utter overhaul” of MPs’ expenses and allowances.
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There is only one thing that can make politicians, sit up and take notice, or lose any sleep over, and that is, the apathetic voter. Think about it !
Regards, an apathetic voter.
Patrick, Liverpool, Lancashire
It's all right moaning about these things to each other(a national characteristic I'm sorry to say),but the people who really need to know are the MP's themselves.Tell them and keep telling them until they actually do something or show their continuing arrogance by ignoring the electorate.
Scare them,they deserve to be scared.
Peter Jones, Birmingham, England
Tony Blairâs patronising âJohn is Johnâ remark following one of John Prescottâs many gaffes exposed the âinverse snobberyâ that seems inbred in a certain section of New Labour, since then they have attempted to mask their embarrassment of others they think are beneath them with similar dismissive comments, Michael Martin is just the latest example. If New Labourâs prawn sandwich brigade really believes the behaviour of these odd balls is typical of all the unskilled in this country then its shows how out of touch with the public they really are.
Brian Christley, Abergele, UK
No one will believe anything they do internally. It will be a huge cover up. An open, independent with full transperency investigation is required into MPs funding.
roger kingston, york,
We don't want you. Quit.
Farrukh, Woking, UK
I don t think that Mr Martin s stretching of the rules is all that serious myself, if one accepts the present attitude in this country to disproportionate rewards, the introduction of these casinos, and so on. Compared to what underlies Lord Ashcroft and his funding of the Tory party it is trivial stuff. But surely it is time to pay MPs a decent salary; at least twice what they are getting at the moment. It is an automatic presumption, with the present pay level, that MPs are either fiddling their expenses, on the take, in someone s pocket, or a combination of those three, though I am not saying there aren t other angles. The associated presumption being that this is the reason why MPs are so poorly paid, though because MPs were originally wealthy people to whom pay was incidental it has always had a token quality. You can t be expected to mix regularly with people who are getting huge rewards for doing not a great deal more than get lucky and be unaffected by this.
Henry Percy, London, UK
Waste of time. Nobody will believe anything he says so what's the point. Just retire and count your pension you greedy sod.
Roger, Surrey,
Just get rid of this greedy grabbing piece of garbage
don't even know of he should be the speaker of the English Parliament he was voted in by Scots they have their own government. Question is would they tolerate a hands in the till MP answer no.
Barry Holmes, Christchurch, New Zealand
Mr Martin overseeing the MPs expense review is tantamount to putting the fox in charge of guarding the chicken coop!
The oversight committee on MPs expenses should be made up of random chosen members from the electorate, whilst MPs wage increases should be voted on by the electorate, referendum style, not by themselves.
The corruption which is running through our political system is rife, only matched by the arrogance of the government towards the electorates feelings, in order to restore any faith in our democratic system we must see an openly public review on pay and a referendum on the so-called Lisbon Treaty.
Leslie Corrin, Southport, England
Surely an independent outsider should lead this review. How can he be unbiased and impartial if he is an MP himself who actually claims these expenses. It makes a mockery of fairness and propriety. Jobs for the boys or what ?! It`s not surprising that people get turned off from politics when fiddling and blatant abuse of position and privilege goes on.
Clean up politics please or we`ll be likened to Italy or Russia next ! Legitimate, uncorrupt politicians ; is that too much to ask ?
Jo Sullivan, Liverpool, Merseyside