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BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK

29 May 10 - 04:26 AM (#2916439)
Subject: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Arthur_itus

Blimey, when does all this expense controversy stop?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8712383.stm

Avoidence of the truth seems to be the issue here IMHO

So, it would appear that he has been living in his partners property and paying him rent of £40000.

He has tried to keep his private life from the general public and fair enough, anmd stated that his partner is not his partner.

However, the rules seem to say that he is not allowed to claim expenses whilst living with your partner.

By doing what he has done, was/is cheaper for the country. So should he be excused?

One part of me says "No he shouldn't be excused and should resign" and the other part says "Give him another chance and sort out another loophole."

Open for discussion, but please refrain from flaming and insulting fellow Mudcatters.


29 May 10 - 04:41 AM (#2916444)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: s&r

`When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, `it means just what I choose it to mean -- neither more nor less.'

Spouse Partner Landlord........

Stu


29 May 10 - 04:50 AM (#2916446)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: s&r

I think on reading the article that I'm more concerned that the man he's living with is described as a lobbyist.

So if you want access to the government...

Stu


29 May 10 - 06:26 AM (#2916456)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes

I've never lived in London, so am not familiar with rental costs there, but "up to £950 per month" which is reported to be the amount charged for a single sub-let room, seems incredible to me whatever the other circumstances.

Georgina


29 May 10 - 06:28 AM (#2916457)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Leadfingers

I THINK it was Al Capone who said that the definition of an Honest Politician was one who STAYED bought !


29 May 10 - 06:33 AM (#2916458)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: GUEST,Joseph

While the neo liberals have been demanding cuts in our standards of living Laws has been lining his pockets in a very dodgy way.
Of course he should sacked...we can't have one law for the rich and powerful and another for the rest of us.
Imagine if it had been Rosie the barmaid at the 'Duck and Drake' who had been claiming illegaly and had then been caught. She would have been named and shamed on the front page of the local press and punished as a warning to all.
If he doen't go it will remind working class people that the powerful do not practice what they preach.
Joseph


29 May 10 - 06:48 AM (#2916463)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

All sounds a bit odd. Evidently, if he'd bought a house or rented a house on expenses, that would have been quite OK, even if it cost more than the rent he actually claimed, and if he'd then rented a room out to his friend/partner, and pocketed it, that would have been OK well.


29 May 10 - 07:05 AM (#2916477)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Bonzo3legs

If he has acted within the rules laid down by Parliament, it's typical of the media to try and string him up. But if he has not, then he must accept the consequences. Cameron must decide whether or not it is "in the country's interest", first uttering "issyoooos" 20 times, and act accordingly.

I would certainly like to see a section 9a enquiry into his last 3 or 4 Tax Returns!


29 May 10 - 07:39 AM (#2916495)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

What's "partner" mean anyway? I'd take it, in this context as meaning the same kind of total commitment as a marriage/civil partnership, but without having gone through the formal legal procedure.


29 May 10 - 07:43 AM (#2916497)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Seayaker

If you want to find out how little things have changed since the expenses scandal and the election go to the BBC Radio 4 Today program website and listen to the weasel words of Jeremy Brown MP trying to justify this.(Laws expenses story "a massive distraction")

Nothing changes; probably never will.


29 May 10 - 08:29 AM (#2916510)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: s&r

Partner means what he wants it to mean Kevin

Stu


29 May 10 - 08:31 AM (#2916512)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

So if he says it's not a partnership, he is by definition right?


29 May 10 - 08:36 AM (#2916517)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Smedley

I wonder how Laws' partner feels today. You share your life with someone for nine years, you live together, sleep together, but you're not regarded as a ''''partner''''. Lovely to see how Laws' desperation to stay in the closet, allied to his all-consuming political ambition, can lead to him, at least in public, disowning & betraying the person he's been with for nearly a decade.

(If the context helps, I write this as a happy homo, with a long-term mixture of pity and dismay towards those who don't come out.)


29 May 10 - 08:50 AM (#2916526)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

For all you know the other bloke might have wanted to stay in the closet as well. No point in being judgemental without facts.


29 May 10 - 09:49 AM (#2916550)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Stu

"If he has acted within the rules laid down by Parliament, it's typical of the media to try and string him up."

I disagree. There are moral obligations to be taken into account here and if Laws is basically lining the pockets of his partner that's wrong for a man supposedly practicing the 'new politics'.

Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.


29 May 10 - 09:49 AM (#2916551)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

""So, it would appear that he has been living in his partners property and paying him rent of £40000.""

£40,000 over eight years = £5,000 per annum

That is £100 per week.

I pay more than that for my ex council (now housing association) house.

Seems to me he saved the tax payer a considerable amount of money.

And while we're on the subject, has anybody wondered just why the "Telecrap" smothered that revelation until it would do the greatest possible damage, while selling a pile of extra copies?

Don T.


29 May 10 - 10:08 AM (#2916557)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

"That is £100 per week."

What happened to the 'up to £950 a month' for renting this supposed room? The figures seem a bit indefinite.


29 May 10 - 10:47 AM (#2916570)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Bonzo3legs

I wonder what expenses Cristina Kirshner, president of Argentina, draws for her 8 houses!!


29 May 10 - 11:30 AM (#2916584)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Arthur_itus

Don
You say Quote
£40,000 over eight years = £5,000 per annum

That is £100 per week

End of quote

I would like to say that surely he didn't stay there 52 weeks of the year, did he?

We would need to know how many days he was in Parliament per annum.

Anybody got any ideas?


29 May 10 - 12:15 PM (#2916612)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

So long as the rent is a reasonable one, why should it make any difference who it is paid to? Landlord, lover or council.


29 May 10 - 12:56 PM (#2916631)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes

The rent to lover/family member explanation wouldn't work for someone claiming Housing Benefit, so it shouldn't apply to people being paid out of other public funds (i.e. our money) either.

Georgina


29 May 10 - 01:14 PM (#2916635)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

I can't see the logic of it whether it's Housing Benefit or Parliamentary expenses.


29 May 10 - 01:18 PM (#2916638)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Royston

Another one with his finger in the tills.

Or to put it another way: A mendacious, cheating, untrustworthy git.

Or to put it another way: A Liberal Democrat sell-out traitor. What more should we expect?


29 May 10 - 01:31 PM (#2916645)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Bonzo3legs

The rent to lover/family member explanation wouldn't work for someone claiming Housing Benefit, so it shouldn't apply to people being paid out of other public funds (i.e. our money) either.

I can't imagine what Housing Benefit has to do with it??


29 May 10 - 01:52 PM (#2916657)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes

I assume the Telegraph is giving £950 as the top monthly amount because they've got the specific detail straight from the House of Commons Fees Office information that started all the coverage in the first place.

And ultimately, transparency and fairness IS important when you're dealing with public money. It might be cheaper to appoint a chum to a job because they're a perfectly splendid and capable type and its saves the money for advertising and talking to loads of other people, but it's neither demonstrably fair nor transparent. Renting a room off a chum or family member, needs to pass a market test and allow other potential landlords their chance to quote a lower price and save the public's money.

MPs or Benefit Claimants, they all need to show they're making lawful use of our money.


Georgina


29 May 10 - 01:58 PM (#2916661)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

I still can't see why it makes any difference who the landlord is, aside from the case where there is a shared legal ownership of the property through marriage or civil partnership.


29 May 10 - 02:44 PM (#2916690)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Arthur_itus

It would seem that Law does not live with his boyfriend 24/7, but only on occasions when he is in LOndon, serving his country.

I would have thought that was acceptable.


How many of us, if staying at a friends house overnight, wouldn't find some way of compensating them.


29 May 10 - 02:57 PM (#2916698)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: s&r

Am I the only one who has any concern that a Minister has a shared and hitherto secret liaison with a lobbyist?

Stu

PS "it means what I want it to mean" is nonsense from the pen of Lewis Carroll


29 May 10 - 04:59 PM (#2916780)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Arthur_itus

He has resigned


29 May 10 - 06:12 PM (#2916845)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

""What happened to the 'up to £950 a month' for renting this supposed room? The figures seem a bit indefinite.""

The up to £950 for central London lettings was mooted as the going market rate, CS, not what Laws was paying.

Don T.


29 May 10 - 06:17 PM (#2916852)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

I've been wondering how he and indeed the press would have handled the 'story' if (like plenty of mature professional men of his ilk, with families and reputations etc.) he'd have been providing his long-term mistress with public funds in return for sharing her bed a few times a month? I'm quite certain the press would have been all over a woman like flies, his desire for privacy would have been ridiculed, and she'd have been rendered as some kind of courtesan (gold digging slut) for starters..


29 May 10 - 06:18 PM (#2916853)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

Thanks for the clarification Don.


29 May 10 - 06:24 PM (#2916858)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

""Am I the only one who has any concern that a Minister has a shared and hitherto secret liaison with a lobbyist?""

Unless it can be proved that there was any favour gained by that lobbyist, and further proved that there is a liaison, other than friendship, then you are (rightly) the only one concerned.

I am more concerned at the reason the Telegraph sat on this one until now.

If I were a cynic, I might advance the theory that the story was a non runner until Laws achieved some prominence in government, and that the furore is a deliberately orchestrated attempt to sell an extra million copies without regard or concern for the damage caused.

Modern newspapers are the last place a sensible man would look for news, and they are not even absorbent enough for use in place of bog roll.

Don T.


29 May 10 - 06:28 PM (#2916860)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Crow Sister (off with the fairies)

"I am more concerned at the reason the Telegraph sat on this one until now.
If I were a cynic, I might advance the theory that the story was a non runner until Laws achieved some prominence in government, and that the furore is a deliberately orchestrated attempt to sell an extra million copies without regard or concern for the damage caused."

I think you're spot on Don. No cynicism needed.


29 May 10 - 06:33 PM (#2916864)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

Incidentally, the comment about how many times he occupied the room is, IMO, a red herring.

Firstly, an MP is likely to be called to London at short notice, and for that reason the room would have to be available all the time Parliament was in session, so a rent of £100 per week would seem more than reasonable.

Secondly, the total he drew over eight years amounted to £40,000 regardless of when the claims were put in and settled. So if he ever did draw £950 in one go, that strongly suggests that the amount represented nine and a half months' rent.

Even the fees office stated that he could have taken accomodation at a much higher rent, and claimed for it.

Jst another newsrag witch hunt, to which all the slavering left wingers respond like Pavlov's dogs to the dinner bell.

Don T.


29 May 10 - 06:36 PM (#2916865)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: GUEST

Just so there's no misunderstanding, it seems the actual amounts of rents are now on record:

According to his expenses claims, from April 2004 Mr Laws claimed £700 a month to cover the rent in his partner's flat. The MP's monthly rent rose to £780 at the beginning of January 2005, and then to £920 in February 2006.

He also claimed for telephone bills, maintenance and cleaning at the flat.

Georgina


29 May 10 - 06:37 PM (#2916866)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: McGrath of Harlow

I can't see any reason to think there'd have been any particular shock about an unmarried MP needing a place to stay in London renting a room in a lady friend's house.

And I'd question whether there'd have been any automatic assumption that they were "partners", even if there was reason to think that they were both heterosexuals.


29 May 10 - 07:01 PM (#2916874)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

OK

2004 160 per week.
2005 180 per week.
2006 212 per week.

Still only £40,000 in eight years, an average for the whole period of £100 per week.

So, doing the math, the rents at the start of the period must have been much lower than £100 per week.

Whatever way you work it out that averages out below council house rent for a property thirty miles out of London.

For the central area of greater London it is seriously below market price.

They should be thanking him for his frugality, not hounding him to resign.

It's doubly unfair when you know that New Labour has only "suspended" those of their mob who are being prosecuted, one of them for claiming mortgage payments on a mortgage already paid off, showing how much concern they have for honesty and openness.

Don T.


29 May 10 - 07:15 PM (#2916882)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Smedley

None of the Labour MPs facing prosecution were in high office. They certainly weren't presiding over punitive cuts in public expenditure.

They are crooks, I quite agree. But Laws is a not just a crook but also a hypocrite, and consumed by self-hatred. Not somebody I want in such a position of pwer.


29 May 10 - 07:38 PM (#2916903)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws apologisesUK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

So if I understand you correctly Smedley:-

1. Keeping your private life private is self hating and hypocritical.

2. Claiming a legitimate expense well below what would have been accepted at the time, becomes a crime when the person receiving payment is, without evidence, presumed to be in a relationship closer than mere friendship.

3. This "crime" is, in your estimation, more reprehensible than out and out obtaining money by fraud.

4. The "crime" is automatically made more serious by the fact that, months after the expenses scandal has been dealt with, the "criminal" is given a high profile job, while the fraudsters remain minor figures in a discredited ex government.

There doesn't seem to be any bar to New Labour promoting those who had to pay back large sums, but of course that happened before they were kicked out of Downing Street.

And the reason why Laws wasn't mentioned by the Telegraph back then, was precisely because he wasn't important enough to sell extra copies, and his offence (if any) was minor, to say the least.

I think, my friend, you really need to apply some more logical reasoning to your position on this.

Don T.


30 May 10 - 02:30 AM (#2917043)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: s&r

Pretending to believe that a spouse is only a spouse if you share bank accounts or go to the same disco while you share an intimate life is a trifle disingenuous though...


Stu


30 May 10 - 03:12 AM (#2917054)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Backwoodsman

For once I have to agree with Don. Laws claimed comparatively modest amounts, well within the allowable limits, and on that score I don't see that he's done anything wrong.

His private life is just that, if he's a closet homo and wants to stay in the closet, that's his prerogative, and that part of his life should be left alone by our arsehole-press - it's not illegal, presumably his boyfriend is over the legal age of consent, and therefore it's got sod-all to do with anyone else.

But Stu has a valid point about the disingenuity of claiming for rent when you are giving it to someone you share your life with - it stinks of self-enrichment. Does anyone truly believe that it's usual for one party in a personal (as distinct from business) relationship, who happens to own the property they jointly live in, to charge the other party rent? Don't fink so. It's more than likely that 'paying rent' to the boyfriend was a ploy in the plan to keep the nature of the relationship secret, to make it appear to be a landlord/tenant relationship rather than a personal one.

Whatever - the guy resigned, he did the honourable thing. Let's leave the pair of them alone, eh?


30 May 10 - 03:27 AM (#2917060)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Smedley

Sexuality is not a private matter. If it were, then David Cameron would not parade his pregnant wife at every sordid vote-grabbing opportunity. Heterosexuality is massively, inescapably public.

Homosexuals who skulk, terrified, denying who they are, contribute to the oppresion of all other homosexuals. So my sympathy for those self-hating homos, who like Laws often seek gain through masquerading as something they are not, is zero. I am rather hard-line on this, but sometimes you have be.


30 May 10 - 05:10 AM (#2917092)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: GUEST,Doc John

Don't forget expenses are on top of an MP's aleady genereous salary and OUR money. Perhaps if he'd paid the rent out of his salary and claimed tax relief, that would have been more understandable. He was cheating and knew he was cheating, especially after the last parliament's scandal, so good riddance to him. How can such a man possibly judge those on benefits. Imagine how the law would come down on a woman on benefits who did a few hours cleaning for a few pounds. Futhermore Mr Laws became a millionaire in banking at an early age; people only become so rich so quickly by others becoming poor. How can such a man understand or dare to set himself over us. Doing a good job? Don't make me laugh. Governments waste millions and the office junior in an back street accountant's office could find them and cut them.
So go ... and don't come back.


30 May 10 - 05:54 AM (#2917103)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Arnie

Doc John - well said! I was also thinking along those lines. Here we have a millionaire who wanted to keep his private life private. So didn't it occur to him not to claim £40,000 in illegal expenses? He could have bought himself and his partner a house, or several houses in London and still have plenty of change. The expenses rules changed in 2006 and explicitly forbade paying rent to spouses or partners. Laws was aware of this but chose to continue claiming illegally until found out. His judgement is thus shown to be distinctly suspect and this alone should rule him out of high office at the Treasury when what we need in our present predicament is someone who displays sound judgement. It's a shame the job wasn't given to Vince Cable.


30 May 10 - 06:26 AM (#2917113)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Rog Peek

Is this the Vince Cable who this morning said it would have been ok for Laws to remain in his job?

Rog


30 May 10 - 06:34 AM (#2917118)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Backwoodsman

Whether he 'needed' the expenses he claimed, and whatever his financial circumstances are or aren't, are not at issue, Arnie. MP's expenses aren't a means-tested benefit. They are reimbursement of costs paid by the MP as a necessary consequence of his employment.

But I agree with you that he broke the rules, and, of course, by resigning he ruled himself out of that high office you mention. And I agree about Vince Cable.

So end of, as far as I'm concerned.


30 May 10 - 06:35 AM (#2917119)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Rog Peek

By the way, Mr. Laws is a man whose claims for expenses, as I understand it, were significantly reduced when submitting receipts became a requirement. You can draw your own conclusions from that.

Rog


30 May 10 - 07:49 AM (#2917131)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: GUEST,Doc John

MP's are complaining that they have to submit receits and pay first only to be reimbursed later. What world do they live in? When I attend a course - which I have to by law (via the MP's, of course) - I have to submit even a £1.00 parking charge or I'm not reimbursed (via the MP's of course again) and even though I have no choice but travel by car and park in the only possible place.


30 May 10 - 08:36 AM (#2917141)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Lox

Georgina,

£950 for a flat in London is actually pretty modest you may be amazed to find out.

In the gritty south east I was paying £750 a month for a 1 bedroom flat. My current 2 bedroom flat is £875 per month, and that is at a special discount rate because I and my daughter were what the landlady was looking for, so she was prepared to make it affordable so we could move in and look after her place for her.

Laws would have had his flat in a considerably more expensive area, so I would suggest, as nuts as it sounds to someone from outside London, that he was also getting a bargain.

When I lived in Leicester I had a large 3 bed house for £450.

Yes it is crazy!


30 May 10 - 09:59 AM (#2917162)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes

Thanks very much Lox, that's very helpful. You're right, London prices are way beyond what we might expect in other parts of the country, which is why I asked in the first place.
But the MP wasn't renting a whole flat, but sub-letting a single room and apparently also paying contributions to running costs. As a rent for sharing, when you're providing additional help with outgoings, I still think £950 a month seems over the top.
Obviously, the whole system of Parliamentary Expenses needs sorting out properly and the same standards that apply in life outside cosy world of Westminster introduced as soon as possible - and administered by a strong, neutral body. I think lots of people will judge not just the current Govt but MPs in general on the success of achieving this.
Georgina


30 May 10 - 11:17 AM (#2917196)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: McGrath of Harlow

A "spouse" means someone with whom you have or at least intend to have a permanent relationship, and who has an equal share in everything you own, even if you split up. A great deal more than the closest of friendships.


30 May 10 - 11:54 AM (#2917209)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Rog Peek

With politicians from all major parties rallying to praise and commiserate with Mr. Laws I'm wondering just what this 'new politics' is actually all about. Sounds like an even more entrenched version of the 'old politics' to me.

Rog


30 May 10 - 12:56 PM (#2917251)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: McGrath of Harlow

So what is the difference between paying rent to a stranger or to a friend?


30 May 10 - 05:09 PM (#2917360)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Jim McLean

It's in the Green Book, McGrath. 3.3.3.
ACA (Additional Costs Allowance)must not be used to meet the costs of a mortgage or for leasing accommodation from:
yourself;
a close business associate or any organisation or
company in which you - or a partner or family
member - have an interest; or
a partner or family member.


30 May 10 - 07:01 PM (#2917411)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: McGrath of Harlow

The term "partner" can mean all kinds of thing. Bridge, for example. There has to be some more specific definition here to narrow it down, surely.

Regardless of the rules, the question still applies - what is the justification in making any distinction between paying rent to a stranger and paying rent to a friend?


31 May 10 - 02:29 AM (#2917525)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: GUEST,Allan

"Regardless of the rules, the question still applies - what is the justification in making any distinction between paying rent to a stranger and paying rent to a friend?"

Presumably the only reason one should obtain expenses is if there is an actual expense occurred. The reason that you are not allowed to claim if living with a partner is because there is no expense occurred as you'd be living there anyway. In other words the claimant is making the claim for his, or his partner's, personal gain rather than costs incurred. Laws seems to be admitting this but with the excuse that he didn't claim because he didn't want to bring his sexuality and his relationship into the open. He isn't claiming this man isn't his partner! Rules are rules and this seems to be a pretty reasonable one.


31 May 10 - 02:44 AM (#2917527)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: s&r

David Laws is intelligent and well educated. He has learned how to play with words and manipulate them I fancy.

I think he understands the meaning of partner and spouse and expenses as well as anyone.

Stu


31 May 10 - 03:22 AM (#2917533)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Dave Hanson

You can be sure of one thing, if he had to pay £40,000 out of his own pocket he would very quickly have found somewhere cheaper.

Dave H


31 May 10 - 05:44 AM (#2917558)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: McGrath of Harlow

...somewhere cheaper In Central London?


31 May 10 - 06:59 AM (#2917577)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: s&r

"Mr Laws was also facing questions over whether he should have declared an interest when hosting an event in the Palace of Westminster for the lobbying firm that employed Mr Lundie"

Why am I not surprised?

Stu


31 May 10 - 07:21 AM (#2917589)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

"Regardless of the rules, the question still applies - what is the justification in making any distinction between paying rent to a stranger and paying rent to a friend?"


There are no strangers, just friends you don't recognise!!


31 May 10 - 09:58 AM (#2917650)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Arnie

Yesterday a Sunday Times journo reported that the matter of Laws being a homosexual was well-known in Westminster and that he had frequently appeared with his partner at parliamentary functions. None of the journalists or parliamentarians ever thought this worth commenting on, and why should they? And yet Laws, in his defence, says that he carried on claiming expenses so as not to be 'outed'. What a strange world politics is......


31 May 10 - 11:04 AM (#2917696)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

""You can be sure of one thing, if he had to pay £40,000 out of his own pocket he would very quickly have found somewhere cheaper.""

If you can find me accomodation in London which costs me £40,000 for EIGHT YEARS I'll take it.

My current housing association rent for a property thirty miles from London will cost me £48,000 over the next eight years IF I can persuade them to freeze my rent at its current level. In fact it will increase by inflation plus two percent minimum. You do the math, then tell me where you think he can find cheaper accomodation in London.

Don T.


31 May 10 - 12:00 PM (#2917743)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: MikeL2

Hi

All the correspondence here about the costs of accommodation etc etc are meaningless in this issue.

Laws knew the rules and broke them. So he is guilty.

So in his position he had to resign.

Nothing honourable about that - he was caught with his hands in the till.

His excuses were just that ....excuses.

Good Riddance

cheers

MikeL2


01 Jun 10 - 09:14 AM (#2918202)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

My current housing association rent for a property thirty miles from London will cost me £48,000 over the next eight years

Why rent, it's money down the drain. I worked long hours to save my deposit in the early 1970s in order to get on the house ladder - likewise my parents.


01 Jun 10 - 11:03 AM (#2918264)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

I too worked long hours for a pittance to put three meals a day on the table for my family.

Some of us never have the opportunity to get on that ladder mate, especially when the bottom rung gets higher and higher off the bloody ground.

I remember the seventies only too well. The value of our money went down and down, prices went up and up, and our industries were decimated by wildcat strikes about whether the same worker could turn both bolt and nut.

Don T.


01 Jun 10 - 03:28 PM (#2918440)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Richard Bridge

Funny, I thought most jobs were lost when small businesses went bang under the milk-snatcher, and many many homeowners lost their houses.

The gender of Laws' "partner" is immaterial. Someone you shag for many years is a "partner". MPs can't claim rent paid to a partner. He did. He did it knowingly. End of story. The end does not justify the means.


02 Jun 10 - 06:46 AM (#2918920)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

I would never refer to my wife as a partner - she's my wife, and I her husband.


02 Jun 10 - 01:49 PM (#2919138)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Rog Peek

Me too bonzo3legs. I suppose we would be seen in some circles as old fashioned?

Rog


03 Jun 10 - 02:51 AM (#2919604)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

Not at all, it's all part of the trendy buzz word generation, made 1000 times worse by 13 years of labour, gender neuter nonsense - like chair for instance which should be chairman, chairwoman or chairlady, and countless others.

The USAians refer to "server" instead of waiter or waitress. What is the masculine of maid I wonder? I'll ask ours when she returns from holiday.


03 Jun 10 - 03:13 AM (#2919609)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Richard Bridge

Bonzo, you are an idiot. "Partner" includes spouse (ie husband/wife) civil partner pursuant to the Civil Parntership Act, and person with whom one shares life/emotional existence/bed/sex/whatever whether or not in one of the previous categories. It's a meaning that has evolved to replace "mistress" or whatever the male equivalent was, partly because that expression conveyed the concept that the master paid for the mistress (or gender reverse) which is not necessarily the case since women can and do earn as much as men (although they do not always get treated fairly in the earnings market). Grow up.

There is much to be said for a gender neutral vocabulary, but it takes time to create a suitable set of terms that are not ungainly.

If by "maid" you mean "cleaner" then "cleaner" is a good choice of word. Is there any reason you prefer a female cleaner? You give many indications of sociopathy, and I would not put it past you.

Nonetheless, I should concede that my cleaner, my gardener, and my painter and decorator are all female, athough when I last had a specific office cleaner he was male. Nowadays I am my own typist and filing clerk, but when I used secretaries they were often female, but occasionally male, as is often true of nurses and primary teachers. I see no reason why any such person needs ot be of a specific gender. I know one young woman (nobody who is anybody says "lady") who has recently qualified as a fireman (I eschew "firefighter" because the word has been corrupted by the inelegant use of "firefight" for "gun battle") and if you are worried about her upper body strength when fighting fires, I suggest you go and armwrestle with her - I value my guitar playing arm too much to do so.

Gender stereotyping is a lot of nonsense. We are more creatures of the mind than of the body, and minds, like angels, are (mostly) sexless.


03 Jun 10 - 04:59 AM (#2919639)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

Really?? Well, you are allowed to have your point of view which is equally valid.


03 Jun 10 - 05:12 AM (#2919645)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

I would take care lad as to whom you call an idiot.


03 Jun 10 - 05:42 AM (#2919652)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

Bonzo, since you have identified yourself as a Tory, as did I, certain members of this forum take the attitude that you are a non person, with no right to any opinion.

They further seem to feel that in dealing with us, normal standards of good manners and tolerance do not apply.

This is their problem, not ours.

Don T.


03 Jun 10 - 06:08 AM (#2919656)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

Thankyou Don, I couldn't agree more.


03 Jun 10 - 06:08 AM (#2919657)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Backwoodsman

I agree with Bonzo - a chair is something made, usually, of wood and/or metal upon which a person sits - it's an inanimate object. Calling the chairman/woman/lady - a human being - 'The Chair' is ridiculous - about as ridiculous as calling a dog a table.

If anyone referred to me as 'The Chair', I'd want to brain them with the nearest one, although I'd probably just ignore them until they started referring to me as a human being - The Chairman.

And I refer to women as 'ladies'. I may not be somebody who is anybody, but I was brought up by my father to behave with good manners, at least where ladies are concerned.


03 Jun 10 - 03:44 PM (#2919951)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Don(Wyziwyg)T

And on that, BW, I heartily concur.

Don T.


03 Jun 10 - 05:27 PM (#2920022)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Rog Peek

Bonzo
I didn't mean to suggest that we were old fashioned, only that we might be perceived as being so by some. The type of person for example that might go round calling people with whom they disagree, idiots.

Rog


04 Jun 10 - 05:07 AM (#2920348)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Bonzo3legs

Yes of course, they seem to have moved on to different quarrels now!!


04 Jun 10 - 06:38 AM (#2920384)
Subject: RE: BS: TreasuryMinister David Laws resigns UK
From: Backwoodsman

"And on that, BW, I heartily concur."

I knew you would, Don. I may have strong disagreemnts with your political allegiances, but I know you to be an honourable, thinking man. I think we'd probably agree about a lot of things, just not about the Tory Party!

And on that note............!!   :-) :-)