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MPs reject Labour's call for a ban on second jobs 
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But the Conservative leader of the House, William Hague, contended that "by far the greatest single outside influence" on MPs was union influence on the Labour Party.

He said out of the candidates selected for 150 Labour target seats, 83 were linked to the unions, and 49 of those to Unite.

Labour's motion was calculated to create a headline rather than to solve a problem, he argued, adding that it showed little understanding of business and was "unclear".

He warned that it could create a House of Commons "consisting entirely of people who are either rich or professional politicians throughout their lives".


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-31624695

Staggering. Just staggering.

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Wed Feb 25, 2015 10:15 pm
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Labour's motion was calculated to create a headline rather than to solve a problem, he argued

An accusation which of course could never be levelled at the Tory party.

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He warned that it could create a House of Commons "consisting entirely of people who are either rich or professional politicians throughout their lives".

Remind me again William, what jobs have you had other than politics?

I appreciate politics by its' nature trades in hypocrisy, but Jesus wept.


Wed Feb 25, 2015 11:02 pm
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Every constituency votes for a party. The MP returned is based on a random selection of those who voted for that party - a bit like jury service. It could, quite honestly, be you.

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Thu Feb 26, 2015 9:35 am
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paulzolo wrote:
Every constituency votes for a party. The MP returned is based on a random selection of those who voted for that party - a bit like jury service. It could, quite honestly, be you.

I like the idea, but isn't it notionally at least supposed to be a secret ballot :lol:


Thu Feb 26, 2015 4:38 pm
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jonbwfc wrote:
paulzolo wrote:
Every constituency votes for a party. The MP returned is based on a random selection of those who voted for that party - a bit like jury service. It could, quite honestly, be you.

I like the idea, but isn't it notionally at least supposed to be a secret ballot :lol:

Indeed it is, but as your ballot paper number is recorded against your name when it's issued, this can work.

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Thu Feb 26, 2015 5:20 pm
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Whilst nice in principal as always the devil is in the detail

After all what I do in my free time is my choice – If I am an MP and work the 40(ish) hrs a week for my constituency what I do at the weekends is my choice - be it watch rugby go dogging or give speeches for £5k / time

Also what about continued development – there any many jobs that require a number of hours of work to keep your licence (from a doctor to an HGV driver)

And then there are so many loop holes – I set up a Company with my wife as the director and it books and organises my speaking engagements. The Company pays me nothing ( I do it for free) but bills £5K for my time. Under the rules I have not earnt a penny . Now if you stop this you will also stop me working the weekends at my local charity shop for free

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Fri Feb 27, 2015 11:28 am
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hifidelity2 wrote:
Whilst nice in principal as always the devil is in the detail

Well of course.

hifidelity2 wrote:
After all what I do in my free time is my choice – If I am an MP and work the 40(ish) hrs a week for my constituency what I do at the weekends is my choice - be it watch rugby go dogging or give speeches for £5k / time

In principle, yes. In practice, what about conflict of interest? Nobody's saying you can't be a doctor or a window cleaner but what about paid directorships at companies that are tendering for government contracts? And there's the fundamental fact that a lot of MPs don't actually do anywhere near 40 hours a week. If they did, they wouldn't actually have time for so many paid outside interests.

Fundamentally the point of the argument is this : If you are employed as an MP, your job is to represent your constituents. That should be your primary responsibility. Anything which conflicts with that either in terms of interest or effort should not be allowed. If you can't stick to that rule, you shouldn't stand as an MP.

hifidelity2 wrote:
Also what about continued development – there any many jobs that require a number of hours of work to keep your licence (from a doctor to an HGV driver)

Parliament gets quite significant scheduled breaks. I think it would be perfectly fine to say 'during these times we expect you to work say 20 hours a week as an MP and the rest of the time you can use to keep any other vocational skills you have up to certification'. No need to change the current system very much at all, really.

Although I suspect there is not and never has been an MP who was a certified HGV driver when they successfully stood for election. This the problem I have with some of the rhetoric around this argument - a lot of the cases people bring up for not doing this kind of stuff are actually not realistic. Parliament is stuffed with professional politicians and lawyers. They're the majority of people in there by a large margin. Saying 'this will stop road sweepers from becoming MPs' is ludicrous when the deposit required to stand is far beyond the means of any road sweeper in Britain. Being an MP is a role where in the vast majority the people who take it up have either a career political or professional background. Any rules should be tailored towards the reality, not spurious edge cases that have never happened and almost certainly never will anyway.

hifidelity2 wrote:
And then there are so many loop holes – I set up a Company with my wife as the director and it books and organises my speaking engagements. The Company pays me nothing ( I do it for free) but bills £5K for my time. Under the rules I have not earnt a penny . Now if you stop this you will also stop me working the weekends at my local charity shop for free

This is how the declaration of interests system is supposed to work - it's fine to do stuff like that as long as it's publicly declared you're doing so. The issue with that system is that it's essentially self-policing and the public at large, with let's face it significant justification, have no longer any reason to believe MPs are capable of policing themselves. There need to be strict, unambiguous rules and significant (i.e. jail time) penalties for breaching them. Until we get that, this argument will rumble on indefinitely.


Fri Feb 27, 2015 12:05 pm
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hifidelity2 wrote:
After all what I do in my free time is my choice – If I am an MP and work the 40(ish) hrs a week for my constituency what I do at the weekends is my choice - be it watch rugby go dogging or give speeches for £5k / time

jonbwfc wrote:
In principle, yes. In practice, what about conflict of interest? - This is how the declaration of interests system is supposed to work - it's fine to do stuff like that as long as it's publicly declared you're doing so


And (in theory they do declare it – now it should maybe better policed and more serious punishments made for those that transgress but banning all work in OTT


jonbwfc wrote:
Nobody's saying you can't be a doctor or a window cleaner but what about paid directorships at companies that are tendering for government contracts? And there's the fundamental fact that a lot of MPs don't actually do anywhere near 40 hours a week. If they did, they wouldn't actually have time for so many paid outside interests.

Fundamentally the point of the argument is this : If you are employed as an MP, your job is to represent your constituents. That should be your primary responsibility. Anything which conflicts with that either in terms of interest or effort should not be allowed. If you can't stick to that rule, you shouldn't stand as an MP.


Agree – see my statement above re better policing

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OK, so all we need to do is find a half African, half Chinese, half Asian, gay, one eyed, wheelchair bound dwarf with tourettes and a lisp, and a st st stutter and we could make the best panel show ever.


Fri Feb 27, 2015 2:55 pm
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