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Expenses row MP survives meeting | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Tory MP Jonathan Djanogly claims to have got the backing of his Huntingdon constituency party at a meeting to discuss concerns about his expenses. | |
Mr Djanogly says he told the meeting claims he spent about £13,000 a year on an au pair were exaggerated. | |
Party sources reportedly said they may have sought to deselect the MP if he did not provide satisfactory answers. | |
The shadow solicitor general has agreed to repay £25,000 in expenses claims made since 2004. | |
But he told the 90-minute meeting in his Cambridgeshire constituency: "I stayed within the law and broke no rules when I made the claims for expenses." | |
'Unified' | |
Speaking afterwards to the Cambridge Evening News, he said: "I was extremely pleased with the overwhelming support that the association has shown this evening. | |
"It was a very open two-way conversation and I think it was a very unified meeting. | |
"I think we all feel willing, strong, and more determined than ever to take the fight to this government." | |
Mr Djanogly's predecessor as Huntingdon MP, former Prime Minister Sir John Major, is reported by The Daily Mail to have privately condemned Mr Djanogly's actions as "greedy" and "inappropriate". | |
Sir John's former election agent, Sir Peter Brown, quit as Mr Djanogly's agent last week, but insisted it was on health grounds and not linked to the expenses scandal. | |
Mr Djanogly says his decision to repay £25,000 - one of the largest sums of any Tory MPs - was taken voluntarily, prior to the Daily Telegraph's first expenses allegations in May. | |
He said he had made the move in acknowledgement of public anger over the expenses furore. | He said he had made the move in acknowledgement of public anger over the expenses furore. |
'Valid claims' | |
The Daily Telegraph also alleged, over a four year period, he claimed up to £640 a month to pay a number of students to clean his second home in his constituency. | The Daily Telegraph also alleged, over a four year period, he claimed up to £640 a month to pay a number of students to clean his second home in his constituency. |
The paper said one of those students had advertised herself as an au pair and that she lived in his main London home for most of the week. | The paper said one of those students had advertised herself as an au pair and that she lived in his main London home for most of the week. |
It said this raised questions whether public money was being used to subsidise child care costs. | It said this raised questions whether public money was being used to subsidise child care costs. |
But Mr Djanogly, who has two children, said the woman in question only worked as a cleaner. | But Mr Djanogly, who has two children, said the woman in question only worked as a cleaner. |
He said she lived rent free in his London home from Monday to Thursday, doing no work, and in his constituency home from Friday to Sunday while working there. | He said she lived rent free in his London home from Monday to Thursday, doing no work, and in his constituency home from Friday to Sunday while working there. |
He said she had replied to a job advert placed by his wife on a cleaners' website and he was not aware she had subsequently placed an ad on an au pairing site after she had started working for him in October 2007. | He said she had replied to a job advert placed by his wife on a cleaners' website and he was not aware she had subsequently placed an ad on an au pairing site after she had started working for him in October 2007. |
The MP said he had not claimed for the student's board and lodging from his parliamentary allowance. | The MP said he had not claimed for the student's board and lodging from his parliamentary allowance. |
"However, I did claim an average of £65 per week in respect of the cleaning work that the cleaner undertook in my constituency home," he said. | "However, I did claim an average of £65 per week in respect of the cleaning work that the cleaner undertook in my constituency home," he said. |
"This was entirely commensurate with the cleaning work that they undertook and a valid claim." | "This was entirely commensurate with the cleaning work that they undertook and a valid claim." |