Mr Andrew Mackay and Ms Julie Kirkbride


Book Description

Mr Andrew Mackay was MP for Berkshire East and then Bracknell from 1983 to 2010. His wife, Ms Julie Kirkbride, was MP for Bromsgrove from 1997 to 2010. They had homes in Bromsgrove and in London. For Parliamentary allowance purposes, the Bromsgrove property was Mr Mackay's declared main home and Ms Kirkbride's second home; the London property was Ms Kirkbride's declared main home and Mr Mackay's second home. In October 2009, the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards received a complaint about the claims made by both Ms Kirkbride and Mr Mackay. The complaint against Mr Mackay was that he had wrongly identified the Bromsgrove property as his main home for the purposes of making ACA claims. The complaint against Ms Kirkbride was that she had wrongly claimed against ACA for the cost of building an extension to the same property. The complaint made against Ms Kirkbride is not upheld. Commissioner and Committee conclude, however, that Mr Andrew Mackay breached the rules relating to second home allowances by wrongly designating his home in Bromsgrove as his main home for ACA purposes and because his claims against ACA for his London home were not beyond reproach. The Committee is very disappointed that, even after seeing the Commissioner's full report, Mr Mackay maintains that he did not break the rules, when it is quite clear that he did. Mr Mackay, no longer a Member of Parliament, should apologise in writing.







Sessional Returns


Book Description

On cover and title page: House, committees of the whole House, general committees and select committees




The Little Book of Big Expenses


Book Description

A humorous look at what politicians have been buying with public money, plus other scams, swindles and scandals.







Send Up the Clowns


Book Description

Picking up where The Hands of History left off, Simon Hoggart's brilliant new collection of parliamentary sketches takes us from the dying days of Tony Blair's leadership, through the shadow-filled days of Gordon Brown and on to the utterly bewildering days of that comedy double-act Cameron andamp; Clegg. He charts the events that made the news, the faux-pas that should have, and the myriad mistakes that have landed us all where are now. Above all, he gives us hilarious pen-portraits of those responsible for our plight: the belligerent Brown, the unintelligible Prescott, the slippery Cameron and the bemused Milliband. This is a hilarious account of a period which, on the surface, doesn't give us much to laugh about.







Journals of the House of Commons


Book Description







Parliamentary Debates


Book Description

Contains the 4th session of the 28th Parliament through the session of the Parliament.