We must do better over MP standards, says Chancellor Rishi Sunak

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The government needs to "do better than we did last week" in handling MPs' standards, Rishi Sunak has said.

Ministers were forced to do a U-turn after widespread outrage over their attempt to block the punishment of Tory MP Owen Paterson for paid lobbying.

The chancellor told the BBC that correct processes should be "followed to the letter" in such cases.

It comes amid ongoing controversy over Tory MPs being paid large sums to do extra work.

Former cabinet minister Sir Geoffrey Cox has been accused of using his Commons office for paid legal work.

This is banned under Parliament's code of conduct and Sir Geoffrey, who is being investigated by Parliament's Committee on Standards, denies any wrongdoing.

The MP for Torridge and West Devon is reported to have made at least £6m from his work as a barrister since entering Parliament in 2005, including almost £900,000 in the last year.

Asked about Sir Geoffrey's earnings, Mr Sunak told BBC economics editor Faisal Islam: "I'm not familiar with specific details of that case. It wouldn't be right for me to comment on individuals.

"But we do have established independent parliamentary processes that govern all of these things and it's absolutely right that those are followed to the letter.

"Reflecting on all of these things over recent days, for us as a government, we need to do better than we did last week and we know that."

What do MPs' rules say?

The code of conduct prohibits:

  • Paid lobbying (attempts to alter policy) of government or other public bodies
  • The use of "public resources", including parliamentary premises, for work not carried out as an MP or minister

MPs must also declare:

  • Any "relevant" outside interests when speaking in debates or taking part in other parliamentary activities
  • Individual payments of more than £100 from an outside source
  • Gifts totalling £300 or more from a single source in the course of a year

Asked if the situation surrounding Sir Geoffrey was embarrassing for the UK as it hosts the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow, business minister Paul Scully said it was "frustrating" that it was "taking away from the really important things at hand for our planet, let alone our country and government".

Lord Evans, chairman of the committee on standards in public life, said that "nothing that an MP does should get in the way of their ability to work in support of their constituents".

"If somebody is spending a huge amount of their time on a second job, then they can't be maintaining support for their constituents," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, facing the world's media at COP26, said the UK was "not remotely a corrupt country" and that MPs who broke the rules should face "appropriate sanctions".

MPs are allowed to have second jobs but their code of conduct says they cannot use public resources, including parliamentary offices, for "personal or financial benefit".

Paid lobbying - attempting to influence government policy for money - is also banned.

Mr Paterson, a former cabinet minister, resigned as an MP last week after he was found to have done this on behalf of two firms.

Mr Paterson denies breaking the rules, and says an investigation into his conduct by Parliament's standards commissioner, Kathryn Stone, was conducted unfairly.

Last week the government blocked a proposal to suspend him from the House of Commons for 30 days, instead suggesting that the system for investigating MPs should be reviewed.

But ministers U-turned the next day, amid fury from opposition MPs and some Tories.

On Wednesday, Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle said the controversy had been a "dark day" for Parliament - and urged MPs from different parties to help "move Parliament to a better place".

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